QUEEN ANNE · Additions
MODERN ADDITIONS Builder in Queen Anne, Seattle
Additions are where most contractors get into trouble — roof tie-ins, foundation underpinning, and continuity of the weather envelope are unforgiving details. We treat additions like new construction grafted onto an existing home, with engineered connections and fully blended exteriors.
Build timeline
Project dependent
Typical sqft
Custom
Seattle cost
$120K – $480K
Typical lot
4,500 sf
What modern additions looks like on a Queen Anne lot
Queen Anne lots commonly fall under NR1, NR2, NR3, LR1, LR2, LR3. Dominant architectural style: Craftsman / view-modern. Very high — view rental premium
- ✓Structural + foundation engineering
- ✓Roof + envelope tie-in detailing
- ✓Underpinning where required
- ✓Selective demolition + protection
- ✓New space framing, MEP, finish
- ✓Whole-home punch list
Other services in Queen Anne
Every Golden State service, localized to Queen Anne
MODERN ADDITIONS in nearby neighborhoods
MODERN ADDITIONS across Seattle
Queen Anne Additions feasibility — $1,500
Lot analysis, Seattle zoning verification, and a fixed price for your Queen Anne project.
Book Queen Anne feasibilityFrequently asked
Can I build an ADU in Queen Anne, Seattle?
Yes — every residential-zoned lot in Queen Anne qualifies for at least one ADU under RCW 36.70A.681 and Seattle's implementing code. Variables in Queen Anne specifically: (1) lot size and shape — Queen Anne has a mix of original platted lots and post-1960 subdivisions, which changes setback geometry; (2) tree retention — mature Queen Anne trees over a measured DBH may require an exceptional-tree review; (3) historic overlay — pockets of Queen Anne are in a conservation overlay that adds design review. We pre-check all three at feasibility.
What does an ADU cost in Queen Anne?
Queen Anne ADU all-in cost tracks Seattle citywide medians: $300–$400/sqft for a turn-key 1-bedroom DADU. Queen Anne-specific variables include alley access (lowers crane and material handling cost ~$4–9K), older sewer mains (occasionally require side-sewer repair adding $6–18K), and tree-protection fencing. We have built in Queen Anne every year since 2017 and our bid accuracy on Queen Anne lots is within ±8% of contract on 90% of jobs.
Go deeper: Read the Five hidden ADU costs that wreck Puget Sound budgets guide
What rent will a Queen Anne ADU generate?
2026 Queen Anne 1-bedroom DADU rents land in the band typical for the surrounding Seattle submarket, generally $2,050–$3,150/mo long-term with a 5–10% premium for true detached privacy over attached units. Mid-term furnished rates run 15–25% higher when within walking distance of transit or a hospital corridor. Our Queen Anne rental comps update quarterly from on-market and recently-leased pulls.
How long does a Queen Anne ADU project take end-to-end?
Signed feasibility to keys in hand for Queen Anne projects: 9–14 months — 6–8 weeks design, 10–16 weeks Seattle permit, 18–26 weeks construction. Queen Anne lots with alley access tend to finish at the fast end because staging and crane setup are simpler. Lots requiring driveway construction or grading run the long end. Gantt at contract, weekly updates throughout.
Go deeper: Read the ADU utility upgrades: sewer, water, and electrical service guide
What's special about building in Queen Anne vs other Seattle neighborhoods?
Three Queen Anne-specific factors: (1) the typical lot age — pre-1950 Queen Anne lots often have undersized water services (3/4") that require upsize; (2) the tree canopy — Queen Anne's mature canopy means exceptional-tree review is more likely than in post-1990 Seattle neighborhoods; (3) the soil — Queen Anne's position on the Puget Lowland glacial till usually supports slab-on-grade. Our Queen Anne field experience streamlines all three.
Go deeper: Read the Cold-weather concrete pours in the Puget Sound (2026 field guide) guide
Are there any HOA restrictions in Queen Anne?
Queen Anne is partly HOA-governed and partly fee-simple. Where HOAs apply, RCW 64.38.034 (effective 2024) blocks outright ADU bans, but ARBs can impose design covenants (siding material, roof pitch, façade articulation). We submit design concepts to ARBs in parallel with permit submittal, adding 4–8 weeks. Most Queen Anne HOAs approve when the DADU echoes the primary house's siding and roof material.
What permits and reviews trigger for Queen Anne ADUs?
Standard Seattle ADU permit + side-sewer + addressing + water capacity. Queen Anne-specific: tree-protection plan if any tree ≥24" DBH is within the construction zone; critical-areas screening if Queen Anne portion borders a mapped stream, wetland, or steep slope; drainage review if new impervious exceeds threshold (more likely on small Queen Anne lots). We pre-screen all three before submittal.
Go deeper: Read the King County side sewer permits for ADUs: cost & timeline (2026) guide
Can I do a basement ADU in a Queen Anne house?
Often yes — Queen Anne's housing stock includes many pre-1970 homes with full basements ranging 6'-2" to 8'-0" ceiling height. Basements ≥7'-0" with achievable egress windows convert cleanly at $145–$220K. Lower ceilings (<7'-0") require underpinning to lower the slab — adds $35–$65K plus permit complexity. We measure ceiling and check IRC R310 egress feasibility during initial site visit.
Does Queen Anne's zoning allow two ADUs?
Depends on the underlying zone — Seattle's middle-housing implementation under HB 1110/1337 allows two ADUs on most residential lots in Queen Anne (DADU + AADU, two AADUs, or stacked DADU). The combined cap is typically 2,000 sqft. Some Queen Anne subareas with critical-area overlays restrict to one ADU. We confirm zone designation and count at feasibility against your specific address.
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