Browse Forums Building A New House Re: Building with Hall & Hart Homes 301Jul 07, 2018 11:19 am Hi all, we've had an exciting couple of weeks, we received our detailed plans from H&H and also welcomed a newborn! I understand our next activity will be the selections process, so wanting to get any advice from those of you who have been through the selections process for any tips to make the appointments (and any pre-planning before these appointments) as efficient as possible? I am anticipating it will be hard for us to spend a lot of time doing this with a newborn in tow. Fortunately, we managed to visit Kerry to look at the tiles and carpet a couple of days before bub arrived - so we have the bamboo flooring and carpet in mind and have already got a quote on the upgrade costs for this. We also visited the home gallery centre but as it wasn't the formal appointment, we couldn't meet with any of the consultants so not really sure what is part of the premium inclusions. Things we are nervous about are the internal and external colour selections. We have a good idea on what we like after using pinterest and houzz but still a bit nervous about making the actual decisions. Seren1ty, glad to read you got the batten fittings for upstairs and downstairs for your fixtures - did you find that saved $ on lighting costs or was it more for flexibility to do post-handover? Thanks in advance for any advice! Re: Building with Hall & Hart Homes 302Jul 07, 2018 1:24 pm Hi Zen, Very exciting times for you, congrats on your new addition also. We had our external colours chosen prior to our appointment. We used the colour charts provided by H&H to chose the external render colours. We wanted basic white throughout the house and added colour via wallpaper and artworks. Advice would be take pictures/ideas of all features you would like down to the doors and tapwear. We wanted a square rainfall shower head for the main bathroom, retractable taphead in the kitchen. However their standard range was quiet good that we didn't upgrade too much at this appointment. The lady we had at our appointment was fantastic and very helpful. Good luck! Re: Building with Hall & Hart Homes 303Jul 07, 2018 7:28 pm Thanks AllyBrian for your helpful advice! We haven't received the colour charts from H&H yet, though I remember they mentioned in the tender presentation that we should be receiving a folder of information for selections, perhaps it will be in there. In any case, I'll email H&H to ask for it. We are planning a white colour scheme also. We aren't familiar with the taubman whites (our last paint job used Dulux Antique White which we still really like). Which taubman white did you choose? Looks like we have more research to do on the doors, tap fittings etc! Re: Building with Hall & Hart Homes 304Jul 10, 2018 9:00 am Zen Hi all, we've had an exciting couple of weeks, we received our detailed plans from H&H and also welcomed a newborn! I understand our next activity will be the selections process, so wanting to get any advice from those of you who have been through the selections process for any tips to make the appointments (and any pre-planning before these appointments) as efficient as possible? I am anticipating it will be hard for us to spend a lot of time doing this with a newborn in tow. Fortunately, we managed to visit Kerry to look at the tiles and carpet a couple of days before bub arrived - so we have the bamboo flooring and carpet in mind and have already got a quote on the upgrade costs for this. We also visited the home gallery centre but as it wasn't the formal appointment, we couldn't meet with any of the consultants so not really sure what is part of the premium inclusions. Things we are nervous about are the internal and external colour selections. We have a good idea on what we like after using pinterest and houzz but still a bit nervous about making the actual decisions. Seren1ty, glad to read you got the batten fittings for upstairs and downstairs for your fixtures - did you find that saved $ on lighting costs or was it more for flexibility to do post-handover? Thanks in advance for any advice! Hey Zen, congrats on the new addition to the family! That's very exciting and I'm sure keeping you busy Regarding preparations for selections, we tried to visit the display centers multiple times before our appointments, asked them questions, built up a Pinterest account of images we liked, and visited lots of display homes by all sorts of builders to get ideas. For the baton fittings, I believe it did save some money for the installation of downlights, but only if you find a good electrician who won't over charge you. We received some quotes that were double (double!) the guy we ended up going with. We also bought all the lights separately, from Cosmo Lighting in Castle Hill, as they were very similar to online prices, and they have been great to deal with. Good quality downlights bought post-handover were about $18 each, so it really depends on how much you get charged to have them installed. Re: Building with Hall & Hart Homes 305Jul 10, 2018 12:22 pm Zen Hi all, we've had an exciting couple of weeks, we received our detailed plans from H&H and also welcomed a newborn! I understand our next activity will be the selections process, so wanting to get any advice from those of you who have been through the selections process for any tips to make the appointments (and any pre-planning before these appointments) as efficient as possible? I am anticipating it will be hard for us to spend a lot of time doing this with a newborn in tow. Fortunately, we managed to visit Kerry to look at the tiles and carpet a couple of days before bub arrived - so we have the bamboo flooring and carpet in mind and have already got a quote on the upgrade costs for this. We also visited the home gallery centre but as it wasn't the formal appointment, we couldn't meet with any of the consultants so not really sure what is part of the premium inclusions. Things we are nervous about are the internal and external colour selections. We have a good idea on what we like after using pinterest and houzz but still a bit nervous about making the actual decisions. Seren1ty, glad to read you got the batten fittings for upstairs and downstairs for your fixtures - did you find that saved $ on lighting costs or was it more for flexibility to do post-handover? Thanks in advance for any advice! Hi Zen, Firstly, congrats on the baby! As a long time lurker I've been following everyone's journeys on their builds but thought I'd just add what we did (my husband adalon has also made a thread of our Madison build). With flooring, Kerry was great. We kept in standard range for carpet (as we loved some of the options) but upgraded the underlay. We actually originally selected a different carpet that I later felt wasn't quite right colour-wise, but the design gods were smiling down on us as it was soon after discontinued, so we got to change it without paying a variation. Kerry helped us choose another, even better quality one at no extra cost. We upgraded to timber floorboards (Vanilla Oak) installed for downstairs and upgraded the underlay for this as well. We asked for timber to be included in the study downstairs, so the only room with carpet downstairs will be in the front living room. We went light flooring downstairs, darker upstairs, and dark wood timber treads on the staircase. In terms of colour selections appointments, we spent a lot of time visiting places with furniture and room set ups (Ikeas, Freedoms etc) to get a better sense of the styles we like (which lean to contemporary, minimalist/ scandi) and a lot of time making screenshots from Instagram and pinterest pics after, to get a better idea of the look we wanted to achieve, ideas for sinks, taps etc (things you might have previously given no thought to in your life). I recommend you visit the centres a few times ahead of your appointments and get familiar with the package inclusions and the extras you might want (visit that thread Stuff you Forgot - while many of these are extras that might not apply to you, there are some things you might not have thought of). We visited the Home Selections store a few times on the weekends (they are dead then, so you can spend hours looking) with the Premium Inclusions package etc on hand, to get a better idea of what we wanted. We made choices but also had backup options ahead of time in case the price was just too ridiculous for things like taps, handles etc. Having said that, you can adjust these selections after the day, before your final contract tender at no cost so you can put down all the things you want and then negotiate what you keep and what you don't later on. Nevertheless, it is better to have as much of an idea as possible ahead of time because you don't want to hold things up too much going back and forth for weeks with the various vendors. H&H have really good inclusions, but there are still many things that you might want or particular style that might cost a bit more. For example, while it only appears to have 3 categories (see the letter codes at the bottom of the Caesarstone pictures - it will have SM, PM etc), but Ceasarstone actually has about 6-7 tiers of price points. There are only about 4-5 that come at no extra cost, and some of the ones you think might be in standard you might have to pay a little more for. Some of these are not too much - I think our upgrade was about 2k - this was on top of the extra for a waterfall bench), but if you're after the supernatural range you're looking at an extra $20k plus. If you want a textured cupboard door for your cabinetry, that will usually cost extra. If you want two cupboard colours in your kitchen (as we did) that cost a few hundred extra. In terms of lighting, we got 32 downlights included, but had them all installed mainly downstairs and a few in the hall etc upstairs, that way we had continuity in the appearance of down lights downstairs and in main spaces, without it mattering if our down lights were slightly different in appearance or shape upstairs. This also helped us save some money in short and long-term (as I have to keep reminding myself, anything that goes on to your mortgage costs you far more in the long run). We got provisions for the rest, and some provisions for fans upstairs (Sydney heat!). The bedrooms (except main) will get fan lights installed after, but we have the provisions for this and chandelier-style pendant light over stairs. Powerpoints and plumbing are really important as well, and not just for the kitchen - if you plan on setting up watering systems, having security lights, front of house lights, fairy lights etc then you'll need to work out how many and roughly where. I suggest photocopying your plans and planning out your own draft electrical on it, marking out where you might want downlights, fans, powerpoints (internal and external), external and internal lights, security system panel etc. You will also need to have some idea of furniture layout (where's the TV, computer, couch, lamp tables etc going). You may also want to have more than 2 zone control of your ducted aircon, so think about where you want your zones. They will still help "fix" and perfect the plan, but it's better to go in with an idea. In terms of the actual day, I can't speak too much of the details. Unfortunately they were super booked up and could only do it on a day I couldn't miss work (!), so adalon went alone. We booked all the appointments in one day, but Adalon and I had spent weeks making a folder with all our schemes, electrical plan draft, list of materials, colour, paint choices etc. We went room by room so we were really comfortable with what it would include. He also 3D modelled everything in Sketchup, and we drew all over photocopied versions of the plan, in order to know where we wanted ahead of time. You could definitely be a bit less systematic about it though if you are both there to decide on the day, as they book you in for about 1.5-2 hours and really will guide you through each appointment. With the folder and draft plans in hand, Adalon only took 10-15 minutes for each one, so he spent a lot of time walking around the Hills district trying to kill time . Sorry for the length - hope this helps! Re: Building with Hall & Hart Homes 306Jul 10, 2018 9:05 pm Hi Zen, We choose Straw Grey for all walls (looks off white) and Tahira white for the skirting and ceiling. We have Espresso bricks, Monument roof tiles and window frames. Surfmist render and a blue/grey feature render. Timber front door and timber look garage and front balcony. Hope this helps. Re: Building with Hall & Hart Homes 312Jul 10, 2018 11:55 pm Le_Pip Zen Hi all, we've had an exciting couple of weeks, we received our detailed plans from H&H and also welcomed a newborn! I understand our next activity will be the selections process, so wanting to get any advice from those of you who have been through the selections process for any tips to make the appointments (and any pre-planning before these appointments) as efficient as possible? I am anticipating it will be hard for us to spend a lot of time doing this with a newborn in tow. Fortunately, we managed to visit Kerry to look at the tiles and carpet a couple of days before bub arrived - so we have the bamboo flooring and carpet in mind and have already got a quote on the upgrade costs for this. We also visited the home gallery centre but as it wasn't the formal appointment, we couldn't meet with any of the consultants so not really sure what is part of the premium inclusions. Things we are nervous about are the internal and external colour selections. We have a good idea on what we like after using pinterest and houzz but still a bit nervous about making the actual decisions. Seren1ty, glad to read you got the batten fittings for upstairs and downstairs for your fixtures - did you find that saved $ on lighting costs or was it more for flexibility to do post-handover? Thanks in advance for any advice! Hi Zen, Firstly, congrats on the baby! As a long time lurker I've been following everyone's journeys on their builds but thought I'd just add what we did (my husband adalon has also made a thread of our Madison build). With flooring, Kerry was great. We kept in standard range for carpet (as we loved some of the options) but upgraded the underlay. We actually originally selected a different carpet that I later felt wasn't quite right colour-wise, but the design gods were smiling down on us as it was soon after discontinued, so we got to change it without paying a variation. Kerry helped us choose another, even better quality one at no extra cost. We upgraded to timber floorboards (Vanilla Oak) installed for downstairs and upgraded the underlay for this as well. We asked for timber to be included in the study downstairs, so the only room with carpet downstairs will be in the front living room. We went light flooring downstairs, darker upstairs, and dark wood timber treads on the staircase. In terms of colour selections appointments, we spent a lot of time visiting places with furniture and room set ups (Ikeas, Freedoms etc) to get a better sense of the styles we like (which lean to contemporary, minimalist/ scandi) and a lot of time making screenshots from Instagram and pinterest pics after, to get a better idea of the look we wanted to achieve, ideas for sinks, taps etc (things you might have previously given no thought to in your life). I recommend you visit the centres a few times ahead of your appointments and get familiar with the package inclusions and the extras you might want (visit that thread Stuff you Forgot - while many of these are extras that might not apply to you, there are some things you might not have thought of). We visited the Home Selections store a few times on the weekends (they are dead then, so you can spend hours looking) with the Premium Inclusions package etc on hand, to get a better idea of what we wanted. We made choices but also had backup options ahead of time in case the price was just too ridiculous for things like taps, handles etc. Having said that, you can adjust these selections after the day, before your final contract tender at no cost so you can put down all the things you want and then negotiate what you keep and what you don't later on. Nevertheless, it is better to have as much of an idea as possible ahead of time because you don't want to hold things up too much going back and forth for weeks with the various vendors. H&H have really good inclusions, but there are still many things that you might want or particular style that might cost a bit more. For example, while it only appears to have 3 categories (see the letter codes at the bottom of the Caesarstone pictures - it will have SM, PM etc), but Ceasarstone actually has about 6-7 tiers of price points. There are only about 4-5 that come at no extra cost, and some of the ones you think might be in standard you might have to pay a little more for. Some of these are not too much - I think our upgrade was about 2k - this was on top of the extra for a waterfall bench), but if you're after the supernatural range you're looking at an extra $20k plus. If you want a textured cupboard door for your cabinetry, that will usually cost extra. If you want two cupboard colours in your kitchen (as we did) that cost a few hundred extra. In terms of lighting, we got 32 downlights included, but had them all installed mainly downstairs and a few in the hall etc upstairs, that way we had continuity in the appearance of down lights downstairs and in main spaces, without it mattering if our down lights were slightly different in appearance or shape upstairs. This also helped us save some money in short and long-term (as I have to keep reminding myself, anything that goes on to your mortgage costs you far more in the long run). We got provisions for the rest, and some provisions for fans upstairs (Sydney heat!). The bedrooms (except main) will get fan lights installed after, but we have the provisions for this and chandelier-style pendant light over stairs. Powerpoints and plumbing are really important as well, and not just for the kitchen - if you plan on setting up watering systems, having security lights, front of house lights, fairy lights etc then you'll need to work out how many and roughly where. I suggest photocopying your plans and planning out your own draft electrical on it, marking out where you might want downlights, fans, powerpoints (internal and external), external and internal lights, security system panel etc. You will also need to have some idea of furniture layout (where's the TV, computer, couch, lamp tables etc going). You may also want to have more than 2 zone control of your ducted aircon, so think about where you want your zones. They will still help "fix" and perfect the plan, but it's better to go in with an idea. In terms of the actual day, I can't speak too much of the details. Unfortunately they were super booked up and could only do it on a day I couldn't miss work (!), so adalon went alone. We booked all the appointments in one day, but Adalon and I had spent weeks making a folder with all our schemes, electrical plan draft, list of materials, colour, paint choices etc. We went room by room so we were really comfortable with what it would include. He also 3D modelled everything in Sketchup, and we drew all over photocopied versions of the plan, in order to know where we wanted ahead of time. You could definitely be a bit less systematic about it though if you are both there to decide on the day, as they book you in for about 1.5-2 hours and really will guide you through each appointment. With the folder and draft plans in hand, Adalon only took 10-15 minutes for each one, so he spent a lot of time walking around the Hills district trying to kill time . Sorry for the length - hope this helps! Wow thanks so much for taking the time to write down your detailed advice, Le_pip! Very much appreciated. You guys were super-prepared and very well-researched! We have our work cut out for us - I feel nowhere near as prepared but glad to get some pointers to save us some time in our research. Seren1ty - thanks for the insights on the lighting- we'll be sure to check out Cosmo lighting for the downlights. We have the extra downlights from the $30K promo, hopefully that will be enough for downstairs and we can provision upstairs to do post-handover. Will be sure to get a few quotes! @AllyBrian 2078 - thanks for listing your colour selections, I had a look at your photos in the other thread and love your colour scheme! Thank you for giving us some ideas. Thanks kjane, I'm surviving on limited sleep but am using my time awake wisely by scrolling and pinning on houzz and pinterest Re: Building with Hall & Hart Homes 314Jul 11, 2018 9:21 am Quick update on our build. We are in Sydney this week and have signed contracts and paid council bonds, just waiting on gas disconnection before demolition can begin. The aim is to get the slab down in August. We have been really happy with the whole preconstruction phase and have found the communication timely, efficient and informative. We made heaps of changes to the original plans but made sure we went room by room and sent through all of the changes at the one time rather than continually going back and forth. That way all changes were captured in one tender revision which i think saved time and work on both ends. In a funny coincidence we are currently staying in an airbnb in Lane Cove and there is a Hall and Hart build just down the road. It is looking fab and the site looks organised. If this is someones build on this thread and you see a random lady and a bunch of kids peering at your house, don't worry it's just me 😃 Re: Building with Hall & Hart Homes 315Jul 11, 2018 10:33 am Zen Le_Pip Zen Hi all, we've had an exciting couple of weeks, we received our detailed plans from H&H and also welcomed a newborn! I understand our next activity will be the selections process, so wanting to get any advice from those of you who have been through the selections process for any tips to make the appointments (and any pre-planning before these appointments) as efficient as possible? I am anticipating it will be hard for us to spend a lot of time doing this with a newborn in tow. Fortunately, we managed to visit Kerry to look at the tiles and carpet a couple of days before bub arrived - so we have the bamboo flooring and carpet in mind and have already got a quote on the upgrade costs for this. We also visited the home gallery centre but as it wasn't the formal appointment, we couldn't meet with any of the consultants so not really sure what is part of the premium inclusions. Things we are nervous about are the internal and external colour selections. We have a good idea on what we like after using pinterest and houzz but still a bit nervous about making the actual decisions. Seren1ty, glad to read you got the batten fittings for upstairs and downstairs for your fixtures - did you find that saved $ on lighting costs or was it more for flexibility to do post-handover? Thanks in advance for any advice! Hi Zen, Firstly, congrats on the baby! As a long time lurker I've been following everyone's journeys on their builds but thought I'd just add what we did (my husband adalon has also made a thread of our Madison build). With flooring, Kerry was great. We kept in standard range for carpet (as we loved some of the options) but upgraded the underlay. We actually originally selected a different carpet that I later felt wasn't quite right colour-wise, but the design gods were smiling down on us as it was soon after discontinued, so we got to change it without paying a variation. Kerry helped us choose another, even better quality one at no extra cost. We upgraded to timber floorboards (Vanilla Oak) installed for downstairs and upgraded the underlay for this as well. We asked for timber to be included in the study downstairs, so the only room with carpet downstairs will be in the front living room. We went light flooring downstairs, darker upstairs, and dark wood timber treads on the staircase. In terms of colour selections appointments, we spent a lot of time visiting places with furniture and room set ups (Ikeas, Freedoms etc) to get a better sense of the styles we like (which lean to contemporary, minimalist/ scandi) and a lot of time making screenshots from Instagram and pinterest pics after, to get a better idea of the look we wanted to achieve, ideas for sinks, taps etc (things you might have previously given no thought to in your life). I recommend you visit the centres a few times ahead of your appointments and get familiar with the package inclusions and the extras you might want (visit that thread Stuff you Forgot - while many of these are extras that might not apply to you, there are some things you might not have thought of). We visited the Home Selections store a few times on the weekends (they are dead then, so you can spend hours looking) with the Premium Inclusions package etc on hand, to get a better idea of what we wanted. We made choices but also had backup options ahead of time in case the price was just too ridiculous for things like taps, handles etc. Having said that, you can adjust these selections after the day, before your final contract tender at no cost so you can put down all the things you want and then negotiate what you keep and what you don't later on. Nevertheless, it is better to have as much of an idea as possible ahead of time because you don't want to hold things up too much going back and forth for weeks with the various vendors. H&H have really good inclusions, but there are still many things that you might want or particular style that might cost a bit more. For example, while it only appears to have 3 categories (see the letter codes at the bottom of the Caesarstone pictures - it will have SM, PM etc), but Ceasarstone actually has about 6-7 tiers of price points. There are only about 4-5 that come at no extra cost, and some of the ones you think might be in standard you might have to pay a little more for. Some of these are not too much - I think our upgrade was about 2k - this was on top of the extra for a waterfall bench), but if you're after the supernatural range you're looking at an extra $20k plus. If you want a textured cupboard door for your cabinetry, that will usually cost extra. If you want two cupboard colours in your kitchen (as we did) that cost a few hundred extra. In terms of lighting, we got 32 downlights included, but had them all installed mainly downstairs and a few in the hall etc upstairs, that way we had continuity in the appearance of down lights downstairs and in main spaces, without it mattering if our down lights were slightly different in appearance or shape upstairs. This also helped us save some money in short and long-term (as I have to keep reminding myself, anything that goes on to your mortgage costs you far more in the long run). We got provisions for the rest, and some provisions for fans upstairs (Sydney heat!). The bedrooms (except main) will get fan lights installed after, but we have the provisions for this and chandelier-style pendant light over stairs. Powerpoints and plumbing are really important as well, and not just for the kitchen - if you plan on setting up watering systems, having security lights, front of house lights, fairy lights etc then you'll need to work out how many and roughly where. I suggest photocopying your plans and planning out your own draft electrical on it, marking out where you might want downlights, fans, powerpoints (internal and external), external and internal lights, security system panel etc. You will also need to have some idea of furniture layout (where's the TV, computer, couch, lamp tables etc going). You may also want to have more than 2 zone control of your ducted aircon, so think about where you want your zones. They will still help "fix" and perfect the plan, but it's better to go in with an idea. In terms of the actual day, I can't speak too much of the details. Unfortunately they were super booked up and could only do it on a day I couldn't miss work (!), so adalon went alone. We booked all the appointments in one day, but Adalon and I had spent weeks making a folder with all our schemes, electrical plan draft, list of materials, colour, paint choices etc. We went room by room so we were really comfortable with what it would include. He also 3D modelled everything in Sketchup, and we drew all over photocopied versions of the plan, in order to know where we wanted ahead of time. You could definitely be a bit less systematic about it though if you are both there to decide on the day, as they book you in for about 1.5-2 hours and really will guide you through each appointment. With the folder and draft plans in hand, Adalon only took 10-15 minutes for each one, so he spent a lot of time walking around the Hills district trying to kill time . Sorry for the length - hope this helps! Wow thanks so much for taking the time to write down your detailed advice, Le_pip! Very much appreciated. You guys were super-prepared and very well-researched! We have our work cut out for us - I feel nowhere near as prepared but glad to get some pointers to save us some time in our research. No problem, though I want to stress that I think we were very much over-prepared in terms of the level of detailed prep we did, so don't feel that you have to go to those lengths. It's just one of the life taxes I pay for being married to a design/project manager ! Just having a folder with some ideas in it with circles around things you like (e.g. Taubmans colours, Ceasarstone options etc), and a solid idea for the electrical layout would go a long way. We just didn't have that option as I couldn't be there on the day. Re: Building with Hall & Hart Homes 316Jul 12, 2018 11:25 am Thanks so much guys for sharing the process and your words of advice and congrats on the bub Zen! We just had our soil test the other day so still very early days for us. Can I just ask, do you do your kitchen appointment before or after Home Options? Just thinking it might be easier to have done it before in prep for the electrical appointment? Thanks! Re: Building with Hall & Hart Homes 317Jul 12, 2018 1:04 pm Jacks Thanks so much guys for sharing the process and your words of advice and congrats on the bub Zen! We just had our soil test the other day so still very early days for us. Can I just ask, do you do your kitchen appointment before or after Home Options? Just thinking it might be easier to have done it before in prep for the electrical appointment? Thanks! Hi Jacks The kitchen appointment happens on the same day as all of your Colour Selections appts at the Home Options Gallery. You also do your electrical, interior colours, doors, and appliances meetings with different people on the day. The centre will line up a series of appointments that follow back-to-back. The only thing that is separate is the brick and external colours. These you do at your chosen brick supplier. Re: Building with Hall & Hart Homes 319Jul 12, 2018 4:53 pm Hi, the kitchen supplier has changed maybe from when you did selections Le_Pip? We did our selection in April and it was with Elba Kitchens out at Peter Brock Drive in Eastern Creek. They said we were their first appointment since their showroom opened there. In terms of order we did the kitchen appointment first then home options gallery a couple of days later. The were really quick with drawing up the detailed plans for the kitchen, laundry and bathrooms. We had them all back within the week which I thought was pretty speedy. Re: Building with Hall & Hart Homes 320Jul 12, 2018 5:41 pm kjane Hi, the kitchen supplier has changed maybe from when you did selections Le_Pip? We did our selection in April and it was with Elba Kitchens out at Peter Brock Drive in Eastern Creek. They said we were their first appointment since their showroom opened there. In terms of order we did the kitchen appointment first then home options gallery a couple of days later. The were really quick with drawing up the detailed plans for the kitchen, laundry and bathrooms. We had them all back within the week which I thought was pretty speedy. Sounds like it has changed, please disregard all I said above. I have a really long hallway which is 1100mm W x 11500mm L I would appreciate if anyone can give suggestions to light it up with Linear LED lights that goes from wall to… 0 5615 Ask for references and speak to them. If they are defensive or try to avoid the request, walk. 1 47573 I would never build with Fowler homes. I built with them in 2021 and till date maintenance issues are pending. All their existing trades and businesses don't work with… 14 73839 |