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Planning an ADU gets easier once you treat it like a real home, not a side project. Before sketches get serious, map constraints: access for crews, utility tie-ins, drainage, and how the unit will sit for sunlight and privacy. These factors often drive cost more than square footage. Permitting goes smoother when plans match site reality—utility locations, access, and code details—before anything is ordered. If you’re comparing approaches, weigh detached vs. garage conversion vs. basement unit based on site access, utility distance, and how much disruption you can tolerate. For a clear overview and a sensible starting checklist, see: adu construction services. If you’re collecting bids, ask for a written scope with exclusions listed—this prevents misunderstandings later. Good plans reduce rework; rework is where budgets quietly leak. Good plans reduce rework; rework is where budgets quietly leak. If you’re collecting bids, ask for a written scope with exclusions listed—this prevents misunderstandings later. Good plans reduce rework; rework is where budgets quietly leak. Good plans reduce rework; rework is where budgets quietly leak. If you’re collecting bids, ask for a written scope with exclusions listed—this prevents misunderstandings later. If you’re collecting bids, ask for a written scope with exclusions listed—this prevents misunderstandings later. |
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