How to Prepare Your Home for a Renovation



If you have a major renovation upcoming, you’re probably feeling a bit overwhelmed. You’ll have builders and contractors in your home and plenty of cleaning, purchasing, and organizing to do. 

This is why we put together a checklist that will save you time, effort, and stress.

Create a Detailed Plan

Before you put on your hard hat, decide what you want from the renovation. The research and planning part includes:

  • Budget
  • Timeline
  • Expectations
  • The right contractors
  • Contingency plan

Secure Necessary Permits and Approvals

Depending on local regulations and the scope of the renovation, you may need permits from local authorities. Deal with these on time so your renovation process doesn’t drag on.

Stay Organized

It feels good to be able to improve your home, so don’t let p[paperwork and poor organization ruin it. Create a renovation binder with all the notes, receipts, contacts, and important documentation so you always know where these things are. 

Declutter and Clean

If you want to speed up the renovation, declutter and clean the room to prepare the workspace for the contractors. 

Use the four-box method to declutter, with separate boxes for things you want to throw away, donate, keep, and relocate. This will also reduce the number of things you need to keep in the other rooms. 

There are often large appliances or bulky furniture in the way, requiring professional junk removal services. If you’re in the area, you can get fast and reliable junk removal in Minnetonka, MN.

Consider Temporary Storage

If you need to relocate furniture and you don’t want it cluttering your home, consider a storage unit. It will make the rest of your home more pleasant and livable, and you’ll know your furniture is safe.

Also, ask friends or family to take your valuables, important documents, and tech for safekeeping.

Protect Your Home and Health

Renovations are notorious for debris and dust. To protect your home and belongings, cover everything you can with plastic sheeting or drop cloths.

You can also add plastic sheeting to doors for extra protection. If there are rooms you don’t use so much, seal them to stop the dust from spreading (it really does get everywhere). Another air purifier can also help.

Set Up a Temporary Living Space

Depending on the scope of the renovation, you may need to set up a temporary living space, especially if you’re renovation the bathroom or the kitchen. A makeshift kitchen is easier to create with a fridge and a microwave in another room, but the bathroom may require you to spend time at a friend’s. 

Plan for Noise and Disruptions

Besides the obvious stress, noise at certain levels can damage your hearing. Noise damage starts at 85 dB, and the usual handheld drill produces 95dB of noise.

Plan to be out of the house during especially loud parts of the process, especially if you have young children. If you can’t, protect your hearing by wearing earplugs or ear muffs.

There may be other disruptions, including temporarily shutting off your water or electricity, so plan for these situations, too. 

Plan for Cleanup

The renovation process is impossible without some dust, debris, and trash. Plan how you want to handle these problems ahead of time, whether you want to do it yourself, ask your family and friends for help, or hire a cleaning service.

Celebrate

Once you’re done cleaning and your place feels new and exciting, celebrate your achievement. It doesn’t matter how you do it, as long as you recognize your patience and effort—host a dinner party, enjoy a movie night by yourself in your new living room, or bake something delicious in your new kitchen.

Interlinking suggestions:

  1. doing it for the first time https://www.upscalelivingmag.com/news/what-rooms-should-you-focus-on-in-a-home-renovation/ 
  2. preparation https://www.upscalelivingmag.com/news/key-factors-to-consider-before-starting-a-home-upgrade-project/ 
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