Reasons For Sash Window Refurbishment Counting The Costs

| Wednesday, May 4, 2011
By Jacob Phillips


Having sash window refurbishment can be expensive but it is something you cannot neglect if you want your windows working properly. If you are selling your property, you will also have to have them fixed. Even minor defects such as broken sash can turn off a buyer or give the buyer leverage to ask for a lower selling price.

Having window sash fixed is costly and the amount you will spend will vary depending on your location. In some states, labor and materials may cost more than others. Find out how much labor costs around your parts and canvass some materials at the local hardware store.

Add miscellaneous costs aside from labor and materials. Your carpenter may charge you a fee to collect the necessary materials and the cost of getting rid of the waste. Your expenses will not be concentrated on materials and labor only.

Refurbishing windows on one side of a wall can take one to five days. Now multiply that to how many windows you want refurbished in the whole house. The labor alone will cost an arm and a leg. You are not even counting the cost of materials there yet.

You may also have to replace broken glass, reinstall new glass and replace casements. If parts of the windows are damaged in the refurbishing, you should also have those fixed. It would be funny to have these types of screens fixed and end up with scratched paint and other damage.

Older homes are very fragile and you can not help but acquire some damage here and there. When a glass pane from an old home is damaged your replacement glass will look different from the old glass next to it. Be ready to change other glass panes too if the difference is too obvious.

Refurbishing these types of windows is very labor intensive and will definitely cost you a lot of money. You may also run into glazing problems because old glass, like Victorian glass with 2mm thick glass panes will be difficult to replace. It is illegal in most places to refit a window with 2mm thick panes because of safety reasons. These types of glass break easily.

The glass will most likely break during refurbishment making it impossible not to replace at least some of them. When you replace some glass and not all, the windows may look different from each others. Since you are already spending money to have these windows fixed, you might as well make all the glass match.




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