What we handle on a home addition
An addition is the most coordination-dense residential project there is. It is its own design problem, its own structural problem, its own permitting and architectural-review problem, its own tie-in problem at every interface (foundation, framing, roof, siding, mechanicals), and its own occupied-house-during-construction logistics problem — all running concurrently. Most addition pain comes from skipping any of those threads. Coordination across all of them is the work.
Our scope on a typical addition project includes:
- Pre-design feasibility — setback / lot-coverage / FAR review for your municipality, existing-structure load assessment, utility-routing review (where do existing supply lines, sewer, gas, and electrical service enter? does the addition force any of them to move?). We catch deal-breakers before you spend on engineering.
- Architectural & structural drawings — we coordinate with your architect and engineer (or recommend ones we work with regularly), review drawings for buildability, and flag issues before permit submittal. Engineering is paid separately to your engineer; we manage the relationship.
- Permitting & reviews — permit submittal, response to plan-check comments, coordination with HOA / historical / architectural-review boards where applicable. KC-metro municipalities vary widely on review speed; we set realistic expectations up front.
- Site protection — landscape protection, erosion control where required, neighbor-side fencing, dust and noise containment at the existing-house interface. Customer-side path preservation so you can still get in and out of the existing house.
- Excavation & foundation — excavation to engineered depth, footing forms, foundation walls (poured or CMU per drawings), waterproofing membrane and drain tile, foundation tie-in to existing footing using engineered chemical anchors or epoxied dowels.
- Framing — deck framing, wall framing, sheathing, roof framing, all per stamped structural drawings. Hurricane / seismic clips and engineered hangers per code. Wall-to-wall and roof-to-roof tie-ins detailed per the structural drawings, not improvised in the field.
- Roof & weatherproofing — new roof tied to existing with proper flashing, ice-and-water shield in new valleys, matched shingle install. Continuous water-resistant barrier across all wall transitions. Window and door installation with proper flashing tape and sill pans.
- Mechanicals — HVAC supply / return additions, possibly a Manual J recalculation if the existing system can't carry the new load, electrical service upgrade if needed (we evaluate panel capacity early), plumbing extensions for new bathrooms or kitchens, gas-line extensions for new ranges or fireplaces. Licensed trades only.
- Insulation & air sealing — cavity insulation per code, continuous exterior insulation where required, air-sealing at all penetrations and transitions. Blower-door test on completion if you want one.
- Interior buildout — drywall, trim, paint, flooring, cabinetry, lighting — all matched to the existing house style unless you've explicitly chosen a contrast.
- Exterior matching — siding profile, exposure, and material matched where possible. Cornice and trim details continued. Paint matched (we keep formulas on file). Roof matched within reason of available shingle stock.
- Inspections & closeout — foundation, framing, mechanical rough, insulation, drywall, and final inspections scheduled and walked. Certificate of occupancy where required.
What to expect — timeline and draws
Most KC home additions run 14 to 24 weeks of construction, plus 4 to 8 weeks of permit lag on the front end. The wide range reflects scope: a small bump-out wraps in 8 to 14 weeks. A standard ground-level addition runs 14 to 20. A second-story is 16 to 24 weeks of construction with a 2-4 week intense weather-vulnerability window during framing.
Before any ground breaks, you receive a written master schedule with every milestone, every inspection point, every long-lead item, and every decision deadline (when do we need cabinet selections finalized? when do we need the roof color picked? these can hold up the build if missed). Draws against the contract are tied to milestones rather than the calendar. A standard structure looks like:
- 25% at signing — secures the schedule slot, covers permit and engineering fees, orders long-lead items.
- 25% at foundation completion — footings, walls, slab or framed floor inspected.
- 25% at dry-in — framing, sheathing, roof, windows, doors all installed and weather-protected.
- 15% at substantial completion — interior trades, drywall, paint, flooring, fixtures done.
- 10% retained until the punch list is fully signed off and the city final inspection has passed.
Pricing factors
Kansas City home additions generally fall into these bands:
- Bump-out — 100-200 sq ft single-room ground-level addition, no foundation excavation, simple roof tie-in. Roughly $30,000 to $60,000.
- Standard ground-level addition — 300-500 sq ft, new foundation, new roof tied to existing, single-trade buildout (e.g. master suite, family room). Roughly $80,000 to $200,000.
- Multi-room ground-level addition — 600-1,200 sq ft, multiple new spaces, new bathroom and possibly kitchen. $200,000 to $400,000.
- Second-story addition — full new second floor or significant partial second floor. Existing structure may need reinforcement. $200,000 to $450,000+ depending on size and finish.
Where your project lands inside those bands depends on:
- Foundation type — crawl space framed floor: cheapest. Slab: mid. Full basement under new addition: most. Existing-foundation reinforcement (if engineering says the existing footing can't carry the new addition load): adds $10,000-$50,000.
- Roof complexity — simple shed roof off the existing eave: cheapest. Hip-and-valley tie-in to existing main roof: mid. Full gable that requires opening the existing roof: most.
- Mechanical capacity — if existing HVAC, electrical panel, or plumbing service can carry the new load: cheaper. If a new HVAC zone, panel upgrade, or service-line upgrade is required: $5,000-$25,000+.
- Finish level — basic finish matching existing house: as scoped. Premium finish that exceeds existing house: priced like a high-end remodel inside the addition.
- Architectural review or HOA — significant lag and possible scope adjustments depending on your municipality and HOA. We scope this realistically.
- Existing conditions — older homes can hide undersized framing, lead paint, or asbestos materials at the connection points. We scope contingencies honestly.
Why customers pick Tessera for additions
- You hear back fast. Quote within 24 hours of the walkthrough — with feasibility and permit-timing notes built in.
- Engineering is sourced and managed (or your engineer is integrated cleanly), not improvised in the field.
- Tie-in details are drawn and built. Wall-to-wall, roof-to-roof, foundation-to-foundation — engineered, not winged.
- Exterior matching gets real effort, not "we'll figure it out."
- The schedule includes permit lag and decision deadlines — so we don't stall mid-project waiting for a tile selection.
- You retain 10% until the punch list and final inspection close out.