Finishing A Townhouse Attic
The basic space requirements for a finished attic boil down to the sizes of the finished rooms.
Finishing a townhouse attic. Enforcement varies but codes typically say that at least half of a finished attic must be at least 7 feet high and that this area must be a minimum of 7 feet wide and 70 square feet. According to remodeling impact report from the national association of realtors an attic bedroom conversion that includes a small bath has a national median cost of 75 000 and retains 53 of its value if you should decide to sell your house. Finished is important to remember when you re measuring an empty attic space. If your home is smaller than other homes in your area or simply lacks the necessary amount of storage or living space for your family finishing your attic is a relatively inexpensive way to increase your usable space.
When we had our townhouse built we had the option to turn the unused attic into a functional living space. Here are several reasons you should never buy a house and try to convert an attic into living space. To meet all three goals insulating your finished attic ventilating the roof and maximizing headroom use a combination of dense batt insulation rigid foam sheeting and air chutes. This attic was divided into three zones.
If you re finishing your attic insulating it to the proper r value can cause a dramatic loss of headroom if you limit yourself to fiberglass batts. A bedroom dressing area and master bathroom. A contractor or a local building. Converting your attic into usable finished space can increase the value of your home by maximizing the available square footage.
Flooring ceiling and wall materials and other elements will reduce headroom and floor space and it s the finished area that matters. To give the bathroom a spa like feel luxe features were added like a soaker tub a frameless shower enclosure a new toilet complete with heated seat and led lights marble and glass mosaic tiles and a crystal chandelier. Below you can see townhouses with and without a third floor. That third floor is how it would look with the unused attic space totally transformed.
Follow the rule of 7s. We chose not to do it and i ve regretted it since.