Original quote expired April 2, 2025. The front wall is the highest-value single wall due to front elevation complexity and window count. Renewal will likely come back materially higher than the 2025 number. Plan to bundle with the other two walls for mobilization economics.
Part of a 3-wall exterior paint series with the North Wall (Developed) and the Side and Patio Wall (Early). Same contractor, same scope pattern, same quote vintage. Bundle math is the central decision for this project.
The Bedroom Storm Windows project is downstream and runs fully after Dennis demobilizes, with no scope adder and no coordination during the paint job.
| Wall | Low | High |
|---|---|---|
| North Wall, lead positive, 1 storm | $6,900 | $8,900-10,400 |
| Front Wall (this project), lead positive, multiple storms | $7,275 | $8,000-10,000 |
| Side and Patio Wall, lead free, confirm at walk-through | $6,700 | ~$6,700-7,500 |
| 3-wall bundle, single mobilization | $20,875 | $23,600-27,900 |
Numbers reflect 2025 quotes. Renewal will likely move them up. The bundle discount on Dennis's per-wall rate is the value of doing all three together rather than one at a time. Ask explicitly during renewal: what is the per-wall price if we do all three vs one wall standalone?
Same prep pattern as the north wall. The front elevation difference is window count and elevation complexity, not the work itself.
Storm replacement is not part of Dennis's scope on this wall or any other. Dennis handles existing storms per his standard quote: remove, paint, reinstall. Caleb replaces storms later as a separate project once paint has cured. Same rule as the north wall and the Bedroom Storm Windows project.
Tell Dennis at quote renewal: existing storms on the front wall are coming off again later. Ask him to use stainless screws he can back out cleanly, run a moderate caulk bead rather than a heavy one, and not drive fasteners deeper than necessary on reinstall.
The 2025 economic case for bundling assumes Dennis discounts the per-wall rate when doing all three together. If his 2026 renewal eliminates or reduces that discount, the per-wall math changes and you might rationally choose to do one wall at a time rather than committing to all three.
Quote says remove storms from all old windows without itemizing. If the front elevation has 5 or 6 storms vs the assumed 3 or 4, the storm reinstall labor adds up and the front wall premium over the north wall makes more sense, but it also means more storms downstream for the Allied swap project.
Same risk pattern as the north wall and bedroom storms. Dennis reinstalls existing storms after painting. If he uses heavy caulk or oversunk fasteners, removing them later for the Allied swap turns into a chiseling project that risks chipping the freshly painted casing.
The front wall is the most visible facade. Color decision pressure is highest here. If color is still being debated within 30 days of Dennis's start, the entire 3-wall mobilization slips, not just this wall.