In a lived-in renovation, you can’t shut down the entire home, especially if you have kids, elders, or work-from-home needs. If you decide upfront which rooms must remain functional—maybe one bedroom, one bathroom, the kitchen—you can plan phases intelligently.
The contractor can schedule dusty, noisy work away from those zones first, then rotate as areas are completed. Temporary arrangements for sleeping or cooking can be planned with minimal overlap.
Without this clarity, you risk chaotic days where everything is half-broken: no proper toilet, kitchen counter demolished while you’re still living there, or multiple rooms unusable at the same time. That’s when renovation becomes unbearable.
Stating your non-negotiables early helps everyone stage the work so life is disrupted, but not destroyed.
