Remodeling a Genesee County Farmhouse: What to Tackle First and What It Really Costs
Genesee County has a lot of farmhouses. Some are 150 years old and have been in the same family for three generations. Others changed hands recently and the new owner is figuring out what they bought. Either way, the renovation question is the same: where do you start when almost everything needs work?
The Right Order Matters
Cosmetic work — kitchens, bathrooms, flooring — is satisfying and visible. Structural and mechanical work is neither. That creates a temptation to do the kitchen first. It is usually the wrong call.
The correct sequence for a Genesee County farmhouse renovation: foundation and structural first, then mechanical (electrical panel, plumbing, HVAC), then insulation and air sealing, then finish work. If you install a new kitchen before replacing the plumbing and the galvanized supply line fails two years later, you are tearing out cabinets to get to the wall. The sequence protects your investment.
Mechanical work on a Genesee County farmhouse typically means: upgrading to 200-amp electrical service (most pre-1950 farmhouses have 60 or 100-amp panels), replacing galvanized supply lines with copper or PEX, updating cast-iron drain lines where they have failed, and adding forced-air heat or a mini-split system if the house relies on baseboard heat or an aging boiler.
Insulation: The High-ROI Step Most Homeowners Skip
Genesee County winters are real. A farmhouse with minimal insulation — common in pre-1940 construction where walls were filled with horse-hair plaster and nothing else — is losing 40 to 60 percent of its heating energy through the envelope. Blown-in insulation to wall cavities, attic insulation to R-49, and air-sealing at rim joists and attic penetrations typically costs $8,000 to $18,000 for a full-size farmhouse. The payback in heating costs is usually 5 to 8 years. It also makes the finish work more stable — temperature cycling cracks plaster and opens gaps at trim joints over time.
What Farmhouse Renovation Costs in Batavia and Genesee County
A focused kitchen and bathroom renovation in a Genesee County farmhouse — assuming mechanical is already sound — runs $45,000 to $80,000 for mid-range finishes. A full mechanical, insulation, and finish renovation on a large 1880s farmhouse (2,200 to 3,000 square feet) runs $120,000 to $220,000 depending on scope and starting condition. We scope farmhouse projects by phase, which lets you prioritize based on budget without committing to the full scope upfront.
Preserving the Character
Original wide-plank pine floors, exposed timber frames, brick chimneys with working dampers, clawfoot tubs — these are assets. We treat them that way. Where we need to open walls, we match original millwork profile and source period-appropriate materials. The renovation should look like the house was built this way, not like a contemporary interior dropped into a farmhouse shell.
Mid City Home Restoration handles farmhouse and home renovations throughout Batavia, LeRoy, Pavilion, and Genesee County. We hold a New York State Home Improvement Contractor license and carry full liability and workers’ compensation coverage. Estimates are phased and itemized so you can make informed decisions about sequencing and budget.
Call (833) 736-6647 or use the estimate form on this site. We will walk the property, document what needs to happen in what order, and have a written scope back to you within a week.
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