|
One Local Residents Experience
Building a Home in
Costa Rica
by Martin Rice is the author of “At
Home in Costa Rica”
“Lots of folks seem interested in building a
house in Costa Rica. My wife and I have done this twice
and thought that maybe knowing about some of our experiences
might prove useful to others.
Because we're focusing on building here, I won't
talk about buying land. I'll assume that you've already
acquired the land you want to use.
We arrived here with plans that we had purchased in
the States. We found them in one of a myriad of home
plan books that you can buy at bookstores. When we
made our decision, we sent off for the plans.
Although we loved the plans, we had to make a lot
of necessary changes to make the construction suitable
for Costa Rica. For example, we didn't want the house
built with wooden studs and sheet rock. We decided
to use concrete block and stucco.
Clearly we needed an architect to help us with all
this. So we asked the realtors from whom we had bought
the land if they could recommend one. They had someone
they had worked with in the past and highly recommended.
After twice meeting with the architect, we asked him
for a quote, found it reasonable, and contracted with
him to make the modifications.
Of course we weren't contracting with him to design
the house from scratch by any means. Had we been doing
that, the process would have been different. In any
case, if you're going to build a house, you must have
some relationship with an architect so that the plans
you submit for approval are properly stamped by a professional
architect in good standing in Costa Rica.
You will also use the architect to obtain the building
permits for you.
Make no mistake about it, you must get your building
permits. I can't tell you how many times I heard of
people who had their building projects stopped dead
in the water because they had no permits. The interesting
thing is that after you've submitted your plans and
received your permits, there's not a lot of checking
that goes on to make sure that what you're building
agrees with the plans. Personally, however, I would
not take the chance of submitting plans that are not
what you're going to build.
Also in our agreement we contracted with him to be
the supervising architect, that is he would submit
the plans, as mentioned above, would do all the paper
work, keep the on-site log required by law, work closely
with the builder, etc. We paid him $10,000 for all
of that. The funds were paid over the course of the
project, according to an agreed-upon schedule.
We had already found a builder.? He lived right in
our little town. In fact, our property was part of
a huge farm his father had once owned. He had built
a lot of the houses for our neighbors, and we examined
those very closely. We also looked very closely at
houses in the neighborhood built by others. Our guy's
work was really superior, plus he had an excellent
reputation with our friends and neighbors, almost all
North Americans. We never regretted our decision to
go with him.
When the architect had the plans ready, we gave them
to the builder and two weeks later he came back with
a price for all labor and materials. The price was
more than we had expected. We now know that the reason
for this was that he was concerned because the house
was more complex than anything he had ever built before,
and he was padding considerably to help ensure that
he didn't loose money. The fellow did everything on
scraps of paper and didn't have any kind of estimating
system of any sophistication at all, he didn't even
have a computer. Some houses he made money on, on others
he lost money.
Although the price was higher than we wanted, it
was not unreasonable by any means. We both made some
adjustments and soon agreed on a price. One thing should
be stressed here, the price was for all labor and materials,
that is, it was a fixed price. I'll talk about alternatives
later. It was agreed, of course, that any changes we
wanted to make would cost extra. As it turned out,
we did, indeed, make a handful of changes, one of which
was significant and the others rather minor. But for
each one we agreed beforehand on the cost so that we
knew all along what the project was costing us.
Three things we talked about quite a bit before signing
our agreement had to do with allowances, infrastructure
improvements, and payment structure.
The question of allowances is extremely important
in a deal such as this, that is, where there's a fixed
price. Clearly you the owner are going to select things
like finishes (tiles, floors, counter tops, for example),
paint, light fixtures, plumbing fixtures, doors, windows,
cabinets ,shelving, and many other things.
The builder has already estimated what these are
going to cost him, otherwise he couldn't give you a
fixed price. So you have to know what he estimated
so that when you pick things out you'll know whether
you're right on the money, whether you're going over
budget, in which case you'll owe the builder if you
decide to purchase these thing anyway, or whether you're
under budget, in which case he will owe you money.
The question of infrastructure is important, too.
One must make sure, for example, that the price includes
bringing water to the property. In the rural areas
where we built both times, there's no such thing as "city
water." What about telephone lines to the property?
What about electricity? All of this has to be planned
beforehand, and there are costs here the builder isn't
responsible for.
For example, both times we built, although there
was electricity available, there was no transformer
on the road from which to supply our houses. So we
had to pay the electric company for buying and installing
a transformer. We had no phones where we first built,
so there was no problem about installation. At our
second house, telephone service was available, but
the nearest pole was a kilometer away. We were responsible
for paying for poles and cable and having the work
done to bring the lines from that last pole to our
house.
These things about electricity and phone might strike
you as being strange or unusual. But if you live out
in the country in Costa Rica, that's the way it's done.
Finally there was the question of payment. We worked
out a schedule of how much we needed to give the builder
and at what intervals. That made it easy for both of
us to watch our cash flow.
Another important consideration while building is
where you will be while the building is going on. The
first time we built a large house, we were living in
a small guest house right on the property and were
always right there. Indeed, every day the foreman (who,
by the way, was fantastic) would consult with us numerous
times as did the subcontractors. Living on site is
the absolutely best arrangement. It's even better when,
as in this case, the builder lives right in the neighborhood.
When we built the second house we were living in
a rental house that was exactly a 20-minute drive from
the building site. In addition, the architect/builder
lived in San José. What a difference that made.
We were obviously not always available to the foreman
and subcontractors. We had to schedule regular meetings
at exact times on certain days with the builder who
had to travel about and hour and a half to get to the
site. Although it was doable, it was far from ideal.
We have friends who continued to live in the States
while their houses were being built. In most cases
this resulted in large problems and great frustration.
All in all, the building of our first house went
extremely well. The house itself wasmagnificent, we
had all the input anyone could ask for and at the end
of the day, we were still had a fine relationship with
the builder.
I wish I could say that after the first experience,
the second was even better because of all we had learned
the first time. But the second time we did it differently
and I must say that even though, in the end ,we were
extremely pleased with the house, getting to that point
was much more difficult than our first venture.
In this case, we didn't start with pre-drawn plans,
but we did have a highly detailed plan that my wife
worked out with just a little bit of help from me.
Then she built a model that would have done her proud
in any school of architecture.
We met the builder by calling him after seeing his
full-page ad in an upscale Costa Rican home and building
publication. He was an extremely bright young man who
only built log homes, which is what we wanted. There
are other log home builders in Costa Rica and we investigated
them all. But the type of homes they built were not
what we were looking for.
What we did was to have a series of meetings with
the architect at which we would present our ideas,
he would make sketches, we'd come back, look at what
he did, discuss it and then go to the next round. The
purpose of this was to end up with a plan, on paper,
with drawings (but not final blue prints) of what we
would go ahead with. He charged us a set price for
the series of meetings which was quite reasonable,
less than $US1,000.
Eventually we agreed on a plan about which we were
quite excited. At that point, we contracted, but on
an entirely different basis than we did during the
first project. This time there was a fixed cost for
plans, labor and labor supervision. The idea here is
that if they don't meet the deadline for completion,
we don't pay anything extra regardless of how long
they take.
The architect's company was also the builder. Materials,
however, were only estimated and we would pay for the
materials as we went. In most cases they would buy
the materials and I would pay the invoices directly
to the vendors, unless the architect had already paid
for them and gave me a cancelled invoice, in which
case I would reimburse him.
All the things that are normally considered allowances,
that is, the things the client picks, we ourselves
would just pick and buy, since there was no set price
for materials.
There are two potential dangers in doing this. The
first is that the estimate made by the architect/builder
is way off, in which case you could go way over budget
on materials. The second is that the architect/builder
could be in cahoots with the suppliers and we could
be overcharged and they getting a "commission."
The latter was not the case. I was convinced at the
time that these were honest people and even after all
the difficulties we later had, I still believe them
to be honest men. But ... that's the only thing that
went well.
So, we had the estimate for materials and a completion
date 5 months out. They spent a great deal of time
explaining to us why we could be sure that the estimated
materials cost was right on the money and that the
job was going to be on time. Unlike our first builder,
these folks were highly computerized. Which just goes
to show that the old saw about garbage in - garbage
out as far as computers are concerned is absolutely
right.
They were to start working on January 3rd or 4th
and were to finish on May 30th. I fired all of them
about early April because it was clear that at this
point that they had no real idea of when the house
was going to be done -- I estimated that it was about
90% done.
At that point we were a good 20% over budget and
I was having a hard time getting a fix on what was
to come. As you can imagine, there was a lot of other
stuff going on that contributed to my reaching the
point of firing him. One significant problem was, as
I mentioned, they were from San José and weren't
here nearly as often as they needed to be, and the
foreman here was as bad as our first foreman was great.
Additionally, they were always late on their estimates
about when we, the clients, had to make certain materials
choices. This in return resulted in either falling
farther and farther behind schedule or our settling
for something that wasn't our first choice.
Eventually, after I fired them, the job was finished
by a terrific local guy. Before we started the house,
we had been the architect and supervisor for a large
stable, a nice little house for our workers, a large
gate, water system, etc. He had done a great job and,
he's extremely competent and, in general, an exceedingly
nice and honorable young man. We didn't consider him
for the main house because we wanted someone with experience
in building log homes. That was a mistake.
He did a fantastic job in getting the house and remaining
infrastructure work done and had an extremely efficient
crew of local workers. Man, what a difference between
using local workers and workers who have no tie to
the community.
Clearly, the first arrangement with a fixed price
was far superior to this open-ended material purchasing
arrangement. We'd certainly never go into an arrangement
such as the second one again.
Concerning prices per sq. meter for building: there
is a great, great range of prices so that it is difficult
to speak generally. The variables involved are many.
For example, a huge part of cost of materials is based
on transportation charges. Thus, if you're far away
from the suppliers your materials cost can easily increase
by as much as 30%. At times, I've had delivery charges
that were 50% of the value of the materials delivered.
Labor costs, especially unskilled labor, vary from
builder to builder, regardless of what the law says.
This, too, tends to be influenced by location. If you're
building in a generally economically depressed area,
the builder will pay the workers less than in an urban
area where there might be more work available.
The type of house you're building will make a great
difference in per square meter cost as well. For example,
the log and stone house of the second project required
much more hand crafting than a block, concrete and
stucco house, like the first one we built. But then
comes design. The first one had many curved walls,
niches, a curved stairway to the second floor, etc.
All of this takes a lot more time to do and thus results
in great labor charges.
In the second project, in addition to the house,
we built a large stable, a small house for animal rehabilitation,
a large flight cage for un-releasable bats we've rehabilitated,
a small house for our workers, and a large storage
facility. All the prices per sq. meter varied greatly,
not only because of the usual variables but also because
we used several different builders for the several
projects.
But, just to give a general idea, a very good price
for a simple home would be between US$270 per sq. meter
(which is US$25 per sq. foot) to US$323 per sq. meter
(US$30 per sq. foot). A simple house would be basically
a one-story, rectangular structure with straight walls
and a simple roof line built with block, concrete,
and stucco. Some people refer to this type of design
as a "Tico house."
On the other hand, you should be able to build just
about anything you want, regardless of how complex
and complete, for between US$540 per sq. meter (US$50
per sq. foot) and US$645 per sq. meter (US$60 per sq.
foot).
If you're building a simple block and concrete house
and you're paying between US$40 per sq. foot and US$45
per sq. foot, you're probably paying quite a bit too
much.
And if you're building anything for US$65 per sq.
foot and above, you're probably building a mini Taj
Mahal.”
Costa
Rica Golf Real Estate
Del
Pacifico Golf Resorts
Long-time Costa Rican resident Martin Rice is the
author of At Home in Costa Rica ISBN 1413460283.
|