Have big dreams about your new home? Never mind reaching for the sky — start thinking about digging into the ground.
A basement can deliver huge dividends if you crave a private retreat like a recreation room, home theater, or home office. Even if those rooms aren't on your wish list — or your budget — at the moment, selecting a plan with a full basement foundation can leave the option open to finish the space in the future.
Full basement foundations are more expensive and more time-consuming to build than their slab or crawlspace alternatives, but can be well worth it. Remodelers report that besides kitchen and bath renovations, finished basements provide the biggest return on homeowners' investments, and you can make it even more worthwhile by planning on a finished basement from the start of your home-building project.
But never mind the long-term financial benefits basements provide. Consider the other ways your basement can pay you back:
Climate: Basements are cooler in the summer and warmer in the winter. Because they are naturally insulated by the earth, you'll spend less on heating and cooling costs and find yourself drawn there on particularly hot or cold days.
Peace and Quiet: If you long for an escape from the hectic comings-and-goings upstairs, get away to the basement. On the other hand, if your children's playroom or your spouse's exercise room makes too much of a racket where it is, move it to the basement and reclaim the quiet upstairs.
More Space: Maybe you were planning on using that extra bedroom as a home office before a new addition to the family created the need for a nursery. With a basement, you could always move the office downstairs. With less and less space available around homes, expanding down is usually a more attractive option than expanding out.
Obviously, we've come a long way since the dark, dreary basement you were probably scared of as a little kid. Because parts or all of basement walls are underground, in the past they were prone to moisture problems. But advancements in moisture prevention have made basements more livable than ever before. As Rich Binsacca writes in Home Planners' book The Home Building Process, waterproofing crews can apply waterproofing membranes that are as thin as 0.6 millimeters made out of a non-flammable asphalt polymer or a solvent-based rubber. These membranes don't take long to apply during the construction process and can even be added later, although at greater cost.
Thanks to these waterproofing techniques, the possibilities for your basement are almost endless — including something as simple as an extra bedroom or as extraordinary as a sauna. But because of the qualities inherent in a finished basement, some rooms are perfectly suited for the space:
With all those options, it's no surprise that more and more homeowners are discovering the benefits of basements. As you search for the perfect plan for you, keep the possibility of a full basement in mind if you can - consider it deep thinking.