New House @ The Ponds
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
What the garden looks like after 1.5 years
Look what the garden has become after 1.5 years! Never had a garden before so only started to learn!
Saturday, May 26, 2012
Long waited Nearmap Update - 9th May 2012
My front lawn has recovered from the wrongly applied weed killer some 6 or 9 months ago :-)
Earlier imagine ...
Earlier imagine ...
Sunday, August 14, 2011
AV Jennings vs. Allworth
I built my home with AV Jennings from Jan 2010 - March 2011, including right from the very beginning getting a quote from them to hand over. Recently we are building with friends another house, also at the Ponds, with Allworth, as an investment house.
There are some very interesting comparisons.
We chose Allworth mainly for the three reasons:
All in all, Allworth still has some good advantages, such as competitive base price, fast building. But there are also a few other things that they could have done better.
There are some very interesting comparisons.
We chose Allworth mainly for the three reasons:
- They seem to be very popular among home owners around Ponds. They are building probably the most houses in the area.
- Their base price is very competitive. And
- Their building lead time is one of the shortest - around 15 - 17 weeks for a single story house.
- You sign a contract with Jennings as soon as you accept their formal tender. With Allworth you have to wait until DA approval and Construction Certificate are completed. Normally that is 4 - 6 months time and by the time you are ready to sign the contract, you might be subject two price increases. (normally builder reviews their price every 6 months) What's more, we were not told by Allworth that the tender price quoted by them would almost NOT be the final contract price, due to the fact that they would only sign the contract once all paperworks are ready. We ended up paying $3000 more due to two price increases, which we didn't expect.
- Every contract will have some exclusions. However Jennings contract did include all the necessary you need to finish the house. So you can indeed expect a fixed price contract, knowing that how much you would pay. With Allworth, once slab is done, we were told that the dirts due to slab pier drilling, would need to be removed by ourselves. At the contract signing, we were not told that this is definitely something we would need to pay by ourselves some time down the track. That's a few hundred dollars extra.
- Jennings's quote had allowed for enough slab pier holes. With Allworth, not sure if intentionally or not, they had to drill 40% more pier holes before pouring slabs. Another extra two grands we need to pay. As I said earlier, they are building a lot of houses of the same design in the area, I can't understand how their estimation would be out by so much!
- Finally, we are told the site supervisor doesn't have a mobile nor an email for us to contact him. We need to ring a landline only on three days a week, and only after 3pm. It's hard to imagine that when someone is spending hundreds of thousands of dollars building a house, you can only contact the site supervisor 3 days a week, after 3pm, on a landline.
All in all, Allworth still has some good advantages, such as competitive base price, fast building. But there are also a few other things that they could have done better.
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Another Satellite Imagine update - 16 May
This update comes as a surprise. Last time it took them 6 months to get a fresh shot!
You can see the completed landscaping now!
You can see the completed landscaping now!
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Latest Satellite Imagine - 13 Apr 2011
Latest satellite imagine, taken on 13 Apr 2011.
It was the day when the guys were laying the turf. As you can see when the photo was taken the backyard had already been done but not the front yard. By the end of that day all the turf was completed - the photo was taken just a few hours too early.
Wait for next update for the complete picture then.
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Landscape
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