/install home-renovation
Setup
On first use, read setup.md for integration guidelines. Create ~/home-renovation/ if it doesn't exist.
When to Use
User plans a home renovation or remodel. Agent tracks budgets, timelines, and contractor coordination. User needs help evaluating quotes, planning phases, or managing multiple trades.
Architecture
Memory lives in ~/home-renovation/. See memory-template.md for structure.
~/home-renovation/
├── memory.md # Status + active projects overview
├── projects/ # Per-project details and tracking
│ └── {project}.md # Budget, timeline, contractors, notes
└── archive/ # Completed projects
Quick Reference
| Topic | File |
|---|---|
| Setup guide | setup.md |
| Memory template | memory-template.md |
| Project types | projects.md |
| Contractor evaluation | contractors.md |
| Renovation phases | phases.md |
Core Rules
1. Project-Centric Memory
Each renovation gets its own file in projects/. Track:
- Budget: original estimate vs actual spend
- Timeline: planned vs actual dates
- Contractors: who, contact, status, notes
- Decisions: what was decided and why
2. Budget Reality Check
When user shares a quote or estimate:
- Ask square footage and scope details
- Compare to typical ranges (see
projects.md) - Flag if significantly above/below normal
- Never guarantee prices — always "typically ranges from..."
3. Phase-Based Planning
Renovations follow a sequence. See phases.md for details:
- Planning & permits
- Demolition
- Structural/rough-in (electrical, plumbing, HVAC)
- Insulation & drywall
- Finishes (paint, flooring, fixtures)
- Final inspection & punch list
Wrong order = costly rework. Always verify sequence before starting.
4. Contractor Coordination
When multiple trades involved:
- Confirm who handles permits
- Establish communication expectations
- Document verbal agreements immediately
- Track payment schedule vs work completed
5. Scope Creep Defense
Every change request:
- Get written quote before approving
- Update budget tracker
- Recalculate remaining contingency after each approved change order
- Assess timeline impact
- Document decision and rationale
6. Decision Documentation
For every major decision, record:
- What options were considered
- Why this option was chosen
- Cost and timeline impact
- Date decided
This prevents revisiting decisions and provides context for future projects.
7. Progress Updates
When user mentions progress:
- Update project timeline
- Check if on budget
- Note any issues or delays
- Celebrate completed milestones
Common Traps
- Paying too much upfront → Never more than 30% deposit. Balance tied to milestones.
- Verbal agreements → Get everything in writing. "They said" has no legal weight.
- Skipping permits → Insurance won't cover unpermitted work. Resale problems.
- Cheapest bid → Often means corners cut or change orders coming. Middle bid often safest.
- No contingency → Budget 15-20% extra. Something always comes up.
- Scope creep silence → Every "while we're at it..." adds cost. Track it.
- Wrong sequence → Painting before electrical = repaint. Plan phases correctly.
Cost Estimation Guidelines
These are rough ranges only. Always get local quotes.
| Project Type | Low | Mid | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kitchen remodel | $15K | $40K | $80K+ | Cabinets drive cost |
| Bathroom remodel | $8K | $20K | $40K+ | Tile and fixtures vary |
| Flooring (per sqft) | $3 | $8 | $15+ | Material + labor |
| Roof replacement | $8K | $15K | $30K+ | Size and material |
| Window replacement (each) | $300 | $700 | $1,500+ | Standard vs custom |
| Deck/patio | $5K | $15K | $40K+ | Material matters |
| Painting interior | $2K | $5K | $10K+ | Size and prep work |
Cost multipliers:
- HCOL area (SF, NYC, LA): 1.5-2x
- Historic home: 1.3-1.5x
- Expedited timeline: 1.2-1.5x
- Custom/high-end materials: 2-3x
Red Flags to Watch
Contractor warning signs:
- Won't provide references
- Demands large deposit (>30%)
- No written contract
- Can start "tomorrow" (why are they free?)
- Much lower than other bids
- Pressures quick decision
- No insurance/license proof
- Won't pull permits
Project warning signs:
- Budget already maxed before starting
- No contingency fund
- Timeline too aggressive
- Too many simultaneous projects
- Unclear scope document
Security & Privacy
Data that stays local:
- Project details in
~/home-renovation/ - Contractor contact info you provide
- Budget and timeline tracking
This skill does NOT:
- Access financial accounts
- Contact contractors directly
- Make purchases or payments
- Access files outside
~/home-renovation/
Related Skills
Install with clawhub install \x3Cslug> if user confirms:
money— Personal finance and budgetingprojects— General project trackingplan— Planning and goal setting
Feedback
- If useful:
clawhub star home-renovation - Stay updated:
clawhub sync
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install home-renovation - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/home-renovation - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Home Renovation?
Plan, budget, and manage home renovation projects including contractor coordination, timeline tracking, and cost estimation. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 508 downloads so far.
How do I install Home Renovation?
Run "/install home-renovation" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Home Renovation free?
Yes, Home Renovation is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Home Renovation support?
Home Renovation is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (linux, darwin, win32).
Who created Home Renovation?
It is built and maintained by Iván (@ivangdavila); the current version is v1.0.1.