“Second Story Addition Architect in Kirkland, WA

*By David Meade, AIA, NCARB | Piper Cole Architects*

> TL;DR: A second-story addition is often the smartest move for Kirkland homeowners whose lots are coverage-constrained — it doubles livable square footage without reducing the backyard. But second stories require a structural engineer stamp in Kirkland, careful load path analysis of the existing first floor, and thoughtful disruption management during construction. David Meade, AIA, NCARB has guided Kirkland homeowners through this project type many times and knows what it takes to do it right.

Why Kirkland Homeowners Choose a Second Story Addition

If you have lived in Kirkland for more than a few years, you have probably noticed that the city’s single-family lots are not getting any bigger. The standard Kirkland residential lot — a 7,500-to-10,000-square-foot parcel in Houghton, Rose Hill, or Juanita — came with a home that made sense for the family that built it in 1978 or 1988. Forty years later, that same lot is worth a significant amount of money, and the home on it often does not match the life being lived inside it.

The ground-floor rear addition is one solution, but Kirkland’s lot coverage limits cap how much additional footprint you can add. In many neighborhoods, the existing home footprint plus the attached garage already accounts for 30–35% of the lot — leaving only a small margin before hitting the 35–40% lot coverage limit. A rear addition of 200 square feet might be possible. A rear addition of 600 square feet might not.

The second-story addition changes that math entirely. Because the second floor sits above existing first-floor square footage, it does not add to the ground coverage calculation. A 1,600-square-foot ranch can become a 2,800-square-foot two-story home without removing a single square foot of backyard.

That is why, for coverage-constrained Kirkland lots, a second-story addition is frequently the most efficient path to the square footage a family actually needs.

What Makes a Second Story Structurally Different

Every structural system in a house is a load path — it carries gravity loads from the roof down through floors, walls, and foundation to the ground. A second-story addition creates new loads that the existing first floor was never designed to carry. Quantifying those loads and verifying that the existing structure can handle them — or specifying what needs to be reinforced — is the job of a licensed structural engineer.

In Kirkland, the building department requires a structural engineer stamp on all second-story addition projects. This is not optional, and it is not something an architect can waive. The structural engineering is coordinated with the architectural design, not bolted on afterward.

Here is what the structural scope typically covers on a Kirkland second-story addition:

Load path assessment. The existing first-floor walls, headers, posts, beams, and foundation are reviewed for adequacy under the new loads. In homes built in the 1970s and 1980s — which describes a large portion of Kirkland’s housing stock — the original framing was designed to meet the code of that era, not current loads. Supplemental posts, new beams, and upgraded connections are common.

Lateral (seismic) analysis. Washington is seismically active. A second story increases the structure’s center of mass, which changes how the building responds to a seismic event. Shear walls are often added or upgraded as part of a second-story addition to meet current seismic provisions.

Foundation adequacy. In most Kirkland homes from this era, the foundation is adequate for second-story loads — but this is verified, not assumed. On steeply sloped lots or homes with older post-and-beam foundations, additional work may be required.

Bearing wall identification. Some interior walls in the existing first floor are structural bearing walls. The second-story design must work around or replace those walls as load-carrying elements. This shapes the architectural plan in ways that matter early in design — which is why the structural engineer joins the project at schematic design, not after plans are drawn.

First-Floor Disruption: Planning for Construction Reality

A second-story addition is a significant construction event inside a home people often intend to continue living in. Here is what to plan for:

The roof comes off. To frame a second story, the existing roof structure is removed. This happens in a compressed window — typically two to four weeks — and the home is protected by temporary weather wrap (OSB sheathing and house wrap) during that time. The timing of this phase is critical and needs to fall during a dry weather window, which in Kirkland means planning the framing phase for July through September.

First-floor ceilings are affected. New loads from above often require new structural members in the first-floor ceiling plane — beams and posts that may be partially exposed or buried in new finishes. Plan for first-floor ceilings to be re-done in affected areas.

Mechanical systems require full redesign. The existing HVAC system almost certainly cannot serve the new second floor without extension or replacement. A new-construction second story is a full HVAC redesign project. Similarly, electrical circuits need to be extended and updated to meet current code.

Living in the home during construction is possible but uncomfortable. I recommend that Kirkland clients plan to relocate for the framing phase (two to four weeks minimum) and have realistic expectations about dust, noise, and disruption throughout the six-to-nine-month construction period.

Energy Code Compliance: 2021 WSEC

All new construction work in Washington State must comply with the 2021 Washington State Energy Code. For a second-story addition, this means:

  • New exterior walls must meet current insulation requirements (minimum R-21 full-cavity with thermal break)
  • New roofing assembly must meet current ceiling insulation requirements (minimum R-49 in most configurations)
  • Windows must meet current U-factor and SHGC requirements
  • The new HVAC system must be designed to current efficiency standards

The 2021 WSEC is more stringent than the code that applied when most Kirkland ranch homes were built. Budget for high-performance insulation, windows, and HVAC — and consider it an opportunity to significantly reduce the home’s energy consumption in addition to expanding its square footage.

2026 Cost Ranges for Second-Story Additions in Kirkland

Scope Estimated 2026 Construction Cost Per Sq Ft
Partial second story (adding 600–800 sq ft, simpler massing) $550–$700/sq ft
Full second story (adding 1,000–1,400 sq ft, standard finishes) $600–$750/sq ft
Full second story with significant structural upgrades and premium finishes $750–$850+/sq ft

These ranges include structural engineering coordination, new roof framing, envelope, windows, HVAC extension, electrical, and standard interior finishes. They do not include architectural fees (typically 11–14% of construction cost), permit fees, or any first-floor work required by the structural assessment.

A 1,000-square-foot second-story addition to a Kirkland ranch home therefore typically carries a total construction cost of $600,000–$850,000, plus soft costs.

Permit Timeline for Kirkland Second-Story Additions

Kirkland processes second-story addition permits through MyBuildingPermit.com. Because these projects include structural engineering, the permit package is more complex than a simple ground-floor addition:

  • Design and construction documents: 8–12 weeks (architectural + structural coordination)
  • Permit application preparation and submission: 2–3 weeks
  • First-review comments: 4–8 weeks (structural plan check may run in parallel with architectural)
  • Resubmittal and approval: 2–4 weeks

Total permit timeline: 4–6 months from application submission to permit issuance is typical. Plan the full project — design through certificate of occupancy — at 16–22 months.

Second Story vs. Rear Addition: Choosing the Right Path

Not every Kirkland home is the right candidate for a second story. Here is the honest comparison:

Factor Second Story Rear Addition
Adds to lot coverage No Yes
Requires structural engineer Yes (always) Only if bearing walls affected
First-floor disruption High Moderate
Preserves backyard Yes No (reduces yard)
Best for Coverage-constrained lots needing bedrooms Lots with yard room, single-level program needs
Cost per sq ft $550–$850+ $450–$750

Related pages:

Frequently Asked Questions

Work With Piper Cole Architects

If you are considering a second-story addition to your Kirkland home, the first step is understanding what your specific structure can carry and what your lot’s code envelope allows. I provide a feasibility assessment that covers both — so you go into the project with clear numbers and no surprises.

Contact Piper Cole Architects

Sources

  • City of Kirkland, Building Division — Residential Structural Requirements: kirklandwa.gov
  • MyBuildingPermit.com — Eastside Regional Permit Portal: mybuildingpermit.com
  • 2021 Washington State Energy Code (WSEC): sbcc.wa.gov
  • Washington State Department of Labor & Industries — Structural Engineering and Building Code: lni.wa.gov
DM
David Meade, AIA, NCARB
Principal Architect, Piper Cole Architects · Kirkland, WA

David Meade is a licensed architect (AIA, NCARB) with 20+ years of residential design experience across the Seattle Eastside. He has designed custom homes, additions, and ADUs in Kirkland, Bellevue, Redmond, and Seattle. Learn more about David →

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