
DO employ as many professionals as you can afford, especially a good project manager or builder. Getting the build costed by a professional quantity surveyor is also absolutely necessary. Never rely on a costing produced by your builder or your architect: the entire construction industry is populated by optimists.
DON'T throw away all your old furniture and instead buy everything entirely new. Our possessions are our autobiographies.
DON'T expect the finished house to change who you are. It's more likely that the process of building it will teach you more about yourself.

DON'T expect too much of your team. There is an ancient rule of thumb that can be applied to any made thing, be it a spoon or a house, that involves three variables: time, cost and quality. Put briefly, if you want the very best quality, expect to have to wait and pay for it. If you want something cheap, expect that it'll be shoddy and still take a long time. (You get the picture: change one of these variables and you change the other two). And moreover, you're very unlikely to get your own way with more than one.
Few people are lucky enough to get the very best quality quickly, albeit still paying through the nose. Fewer still will get a cheap house quickly and no-one I've met has ever got cheap craftsmanship in double quick time. If you meet someone who has, they're lying.

DO write everything down. Everything. Keep records, delivery notes, invoices and ensure that you have signed contracts with all the players involved. And keep a build diary to record progress and bore your grandchildren with.
DO remember that building a house is not a sophisticated piece of DIY, nor is it an extended piece of interior design. The inside of your home is private and your personal realm of expression. The outside is public property and part of other people's lives. Architecture has a public responsibility and your home will become part of a landscape or townscape, so stand back from the design process and give your architect, landscape designer and planner room for manoeuvre here. As the French planner and building colourist Jean-Philippe Lenclos said: 'If you want to paint your front door, get your neighbour to choose the colour'.
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