Engineers are trained to design structures, foundations, drainage works, roads entrances large civil and manufacturing works and services installations.
Engineers are not trained to design buildings for people to live in, much less private houses.
Which is probably why their house designs look like they come out of a bungalow bliss catalogue and they only charge €500 for a planning application.
So you need to appoint someone who is trained to design houses - which is an architect.
It takes a minimum of a month to do a good house design, from initial discussion though getting a feel for the site, formulating a brief with the client and developing several options for review, leading to a final approved draw up and planning lodgement.
Assuming there are still 12 months in the year, despite cut-backs, you seem to expect someone to live on €6,000 a year.
Let's go wild and assume it can all be done from start to lodgement in two weeks and he works 48 weeks a year and had plenty of work.
€500 x 24 = €12,000.
Could YOU live on €6,000 - €12,000 a year?
But let's imagine a high-powered professional able to do it all in a week.
€500 x 48 - that's the dizzy heights of €24,000 a year for a professional service on which he can be sued on matters of design.
Would you expose yourself to legal liability for €24,000?
Could you run a family and a business on €24,000?
No, would be the reasonable answer I think.
I think you need to start applying a rule of thumb to your costs.
€75-100 per square foot build cost for a compliant building.
8-10% for professional fees to include:
- architects and engineer drawings
- site testing
- planning tender and working drawing details
- limited inspections
- certification of monies and
- Opinions of compliance.
Skimp on that service and you may not be able to either draw down monies or sell the house on afterwards, never mind build it properly.
If you intend to build by direct labour, you're acting as contractor as well under the Safety health and Welfare Legislation.
That means you'll have to arrange for attendances for tradesmen, all insurances, scaffolding, site deliveries, site compound and make sure everyone is trained and competent to do the work they are employed to do - assuming you are capable of doing all that.
If not, my advice to you is employ a main contractor or a project manager who will organise all that for you.
No its specifically NOT the job of the architect or engineer, both of whom will more than likely be precluded by the terms of their P.I. cover and code of practice from acting as a contractor.
I also suggest you read the FAQs at the top of the forum page, including the Self-Build FAQ and the What to Ask Your Architect at your First Meeting FAQ.
They'll help you foresee some of the challenges ahead.
ONQ.
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All advice on AAM is remote from the situation and cannot be relied upon as a defence or support - in and of itself - should legal action be taken.
Competent legal and building professionals should be asked to advise in Real Life with rights to inspect and issue reports on the matters at hand.