I just bid on a shadow-box fence for a 35 unit condo village.
Each unit averages about 40 linear ft. of fence (although most were different and had to measure all to arrive at that number). The fence is 6 feet tall.
My first dilemma: was after closely looking at the fence, I noticed that the boards were overlapping about 1 inch on each side (see first photo). This calculates to about 1.5 square feet per linear foot. On small jobs, I would normally overlook this but on large ones, simple details will cut deep into the profits quickly. Also if you take the board edges and the vertical supports into consideration, you add another 1/2 square foot per linear foot of fence. So now when I look at my square footage of 6 foot tall fence and add another 2 square feet to it, now it becomes 8 square foot of fence per linear foot.
At 1400 linear feet times 8 sq ft times 2 sides = 22,400 sq ft.
if I ignore the details (which my competition most likely will)
1400 linear feet times 6 sq ft times 2 sides = 16,800 sq ft.
As you can see the delta is 5,600 sq ft. and even at $0.35 per square foot,
it's worth about $1,960.
My other dilemma was materials: stain at 150 sq ft per gallon for the 5,600 sq ft
delta at $15 per gallon is a cost difference of $570 (38 gallons).
Same with stripper and brightener: at $0.04 per square foot it's a delta of $224. If I pick a stain that covers 200 sq ft vs. 150 sq ft, (at $15 per gallon) I can make up about $420. Better yet, if I find a stain that covers at 250 sq ft per gallon I can make up another 22 gallons of stain or $330. That's assuming my competition is not using a stain that gets 250 sq ft per gallon.
Finally, the overall price to the customer (for example) if I bid 22,400 square feet at $0.35 sq ft or $7,840. If my competition bids 16,800 at $0.40 per square foot or $6,720, he/she has out bid me by $1,120. Of course if the competition is a bottom feeder and has a $.10 per square foot difference, then the gap widens to over $1,900. Of course, this is what a property manager loves to see.
I'll tell you what I did and what I bid after the project is awarded.
In the mean time, I would be interested to hear how some of you "wood specialist" handle similar situations.
I just bid on a shadow-box fence for a 35 unit condo village.
Each unit averages about 40 linear ft. of fence (although most were different and had to measure all to arrive at that number). The fence is 6 feet tall.
My first dilemma: was after closely looking at the fence, I noticed that the boards were overlapping about 1 inch on each side (see first photo). This calculates to about 1.5 square feet per linear foot. On small jobs, I would normally overlook this but on large ones, simple details will cut deep into the profits quickly. Also if you take the board edges and the vertical supports into consideration, you add another 1/2 square foot per linear foot of fence. So now when I look at my square footage of 6 foot tall fence and add another 2 square feet to it, now it becomes 8 square foot of fence per linear foot.
At 1400 linear feet times 8 sq ft times 2 sides = 22,400 sq ft.
if I ignore the details (which my competition most likely will)
1400 linear feet times 6 sq ft times 2 sides = 16,800 sq ft.
As you can see the delta is 5,600 sq ft. and even at $0.35 per square foot,
it's worth about $1,960.
My other dilemma was materials: stain at 150 sq ft per gallon for the 5,600 sq ft
delta at $15 per gallon is a cost difference of $570 (38 gallons).
Same with stripper and brightener: at $0.04 per square foot it's a delta of $224. If I pick a stain that covers 200 sq ft vs. 150 sq ft, (at $15 per gallon) I can make up about $420. Better yet, if I find a stain that covers at 250 sq ft per gallon I can make up another 22 gallons of stain or $330. That's assuming my competition is not using a stain that gets 250 sq ft per gallon.
Finally, the overall price to the customer (for example) if I bid 22,400 square feet at $0.35 sq ft or $7,840. If my competition bids 16,800 at $0.40 per square foot or $6,720, he/she has out bid me by $1,120. Of course if the competition is a bottom feeder and has a $.10 per square foot difference, then the gap widens to over $1,900. Of course, this is what a property manager loves to see.
I'll tell you what I did and what I bid after the project is awarded.
In the mean time, I would be interested to hear how some of you "wood specialist" handle similar situations.
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