St. Louis Real Estate - Building Inspection - New Construction
NEW CONSTRUCTION INSPECTIONS by Harry Morrell ASHI Certified Inspector, Allied Building Inspection
For those buyers that are considering a new home purchase and believe the home inspection should be waived just because it is a new home, BEWARE. There are many circumstances to consider when buying a new home relating to the inspection process in general that buyers should know.
If you are buying a home close in to the metropolitan area from a well known and reputable general contractor chances are that the home will be well built and up to code. However, consider that this well known builder uses many sub contractors who can always have that one bad day or are in a rush to get to that next job. Short cuts occur all the time even in those multi-million dollar homes. In the world of construction speed is everything and sometimes digs right into the heart of the quality and craftsmanship that all home buyers want. Your home inspector will go back over all the important and significant structural and mechanical components to make sure you are getting the quality that you are paying for. Remember code inspectors do not do a top to bottom inspection. If you are buying a home out in rural areas from a weekend/amateur home builder, I have four words for you, GET A HOME INSPECTION!
New construction inspections can be grouped into three major categories: 
- Phase Inspections
- End of Construction Inspections
- Warranty Inspections
Phase inspections are recommended for the buyer that is purchasing a new home in a rural area with no or little code enforcement to ensure good building quality and safety and usually includes the initial foundation pour, framing, mechanicals, and roofing.
End of construction inspections are the most common and usually are more than adequate for any purchase close in the metro area.
Warranty inspections are a great idea for builders who offer a one year top to bottom warranty.
Home owners can get their inspector to perform a top to bottom inspection before that one year warranty expires. Most common defects discovered during these type inspections are foundation wall cracks, leakage or water/moisture intrusion, concrete pad settlement, and drainage and grading issues.
Most home inspectors have a solid general background in residential home building and have looked at thousands of homes during their career. Do not get side tracked by that new home being perfect. Spend a little now for an inspection to avoid paying more for a major repair or replacement later.
Harry O. Morrell can be reached at harrymorrell@stlouisrealestatevoice.com
This entry was posted on Friday, May 9th, 2008 at 6:28 pm and is filed under Building Inspection News, First Time Home Buyer, For Buyers. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
No Comments yet »
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI
Leave a comment
|
Archives
Categories
- Relocation Buyer
- Unrepresented Seller(FSBO)
- First Time Home Buyer
- Appraisal News
- Building Inspection News
- For Buyers
- For Sellers
- Home Staging
- Mortgage News
- Real Estate News
- St. Louis Market Reports
- University City
- Affton
- Ballwin
- Chesterfield Valley
- Creve Couer
- Eureka
- Fenton
- Kirkwood
- Mortgage News
- Neighborhood Reviews
- Tomato Blogs
- 360 Birmingham
- Athol Kay
- Central Denver Blog
- Columbus Home Blog
- Columbus Real Estate Voice
- Fran Bailey
- Home Financing 101
- Indy Real Estate Talk
- Inman Blog
- Lake Martin Voice
- Lending Clarity
- Luxury Home Digest
- Manhattan Real Estate
- Maxsell Real Estate
- Moonray
- Myrtle Beach Wave
- Naples Real Estate Voice
- North Bay RE
- Options Realty
- Phoenix Arizona Real Estate
- Real Estate Sizzle
- Real Estate Tidbits
- Real Estate Tomato
- Sacramento Real Estate Voice
- Salt Lake Speaks
- Sellsius
- Smith Real Estate Service
- Tampa Florida Real Estate Finder
- Teresa Boardman
- The Silver Bee
- Tomato Tutorials
- Tucson Real Estate Blogs
- Valley Market
- HUD’s Home Buyer’s Kit
- Great Schools - guide to K-12 schools
- Why should you use a Realtor?
- Calculate mortgage payments
- Home Search
- 100 Q & A ’s Buying a New Home
- How much home can I afford to buy?
- Free CMA
- 10 steps to selling your home
- Full Service Movers
- Self Storage
- Prepare your home for sale
- Moving Glossary
- Home Search
- Self Service Movers
- Auto Transport
- Move Planner
- 10 Biggest Selling Myths Uncovered
- Ballwin Missouri
- Chesterfield Missouri
- Clayton Missouri
- Ferguson Missouri
- Crestwood Missouri
- Creve Coeur Missouri
- Des Peres Missouri
- Ellisville Missouri
- Fenton Missouri
- City of St. Louis Neighborhoods
- Eureka Missouri
- Florissant Missouri
- High Ridge
- Glendale Missouri
- Hazelwood Missouri
- Kirkwood Missouri
- O’Fallon Missouri
- Maryland Heights Missouri
- Manchester Missouri
- Rock Hill Missouri
- Olivette Missouri
- Maplewood Missouri
- Shrewsbury Missouri
- Sunset Hills Missouri
- St. John Missouri
- Woodson Terrace Missouri
- Fire Districts
- St. Louis County Missouri
- Richmond Heights Missouri
- St. Peters Missouri
- Town and Country Missouri
- University City Missouri
- Warrenton Missouri
- Webster Groves Missouri
- Wildwood Missouri
- Affton Missouri






















