Here's my refurb thread

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oldgreg

Original Poster:

466 posts

164 months

Saturday 17th August 2013
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Bought a 70s built house last year. Started drawing up plans for a replacement garage and the building control guy warned me at the time that after 40 years houses unfortunately need a lot of work, he wasn't kidding.

Luckily the interior was pretty much good to go. The outside had been neglected though.

It was a complete mess, every corner of it had something growing, hedges, bushes, trees, dead turf, you name it it was growing there.

I got quoted £5k to cut down to stumps, level out with new topsoil and turf. I decided to do it myself because of this and dug out all old turf and took out the stumps using a mattock to hammer through the roots. My total spend was £1k including 2 van hires, pretty good I thought considering almost £500 of that was the 'alledge' edging, weed control membrane and crushed marble border stones.

Here's when I started
 

 
Ready to go to the tip
 

 
Next I had 13 Tonne topsoil delivered and spread. The house is on a hill so the garden is sloping in both directions so it was levelled out to the best of my ability.
 


 
Here was how it looked while I was laying the turf.
 



And here it was just under two weeks after, approaching it's first cut.





Another small thing I did was replace the porch light, you can probably see why...



old one



New EcoLED replacement, which is very bright. The quality of this item is fantastic.

Next up was fitting Lindab guttering, 75 dia downpipe with 125 rad gutter. I only did one side of the house as the other will have the garage attached eventually.



Old brackets, some kind of weird home made hybrid bracket!



Rafter brackets up, you can see how much of a mess the facias were.





Broke out the concrete around the old downpipe and fitted the lindab one.



With the joiner now onboard things started moving a lot faster. All the old cladding was ripped out aswell as the facias/soffits. The cladding and soffits have been lined in Western Red cedar. Just plain old wood on the facias as they were always going to be painted.

Old stuff coming off





Here's how it stands now.



The facias were painted a RAL anthracite grey colour to match the new front door which is a Hormann TPS700 (waited 8 weeks for it!).

The 3 square pots at beside the front door are grade 304 stainless steel, one of my favourite features!! I deliberately ordered the door shorter so I could fit this grade 304 stainless steel tread below it. I got all 4 items made by a guy I found on ebay for about £300 which I thought was bloody cheap!



So that takes me to today....

I've done a few small jobs since that pic, re-pointed some spalling bricks in the front step, cut back the decking (it was covering a manhole cover, was built by previous owner) and re-clad it in leftover red cedar.

I had a 'roofing company' round today that attempted to fit dry verge. They made an absolute pigs ear of it, ruining 20 out of production tiles by cutting them far too short and then doing a runner after spilling paint all over the inside of my garage. Was absolutely gutted earlier today.

Since then I've had a proper roofer round who seems on the ball. Originally was looking for him to fix new tiles and do the dry verge, now I'm looking to strip everything back to the sarkin boards, new membrane, new tiles etc.

If you've read this far I applaud you!!

Edited by GP335i on Saturday 17th August 00:12

Mobile Chicane

20,819 posts

212 months

Saturday 17th August 2013
quotequote all
Nice work.

I'm loving the guttering - what is it and how do you manage the 'joins' where the horizontal pieces fit together?

GP335i

Original Poster:

466 posts

164 months

Saturday 17th August 2013
quotequote all
Also, I'm definitely going to do the new roof this year, hopefully next month. Next year I'm planning to get the garage done and wetdash the whole house and paint it white. The bricks are painted grey as this was originally what colour we were going with, mind's changed since then.

GP335i

Original Poster:

466 posts

164 months

Saturday 17th August 2013
quotequote all
Doh, changed my username about 5 mins after posting incase there's any confusion. Not sure if the original post will update with it.

The guttering is made by a company called Lindab, it's thin wall galvanised steel. The joins have a clamp at the top of them, you feed both ends of the join into it and they're forced into an EPDM seal.

Craikeybaby

10,408 posts

225 months

Monday 19th August 2013
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That looks really good! Does it stand out compared to the others on the street?

monthefish

20,443 posts

231 months

Monday 19th August 2013
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oldgreg said:
Looks great but you'll be forever trying to keep grass clippings etc out of the nice white stoned area. (Maybe a garden vac would work though).

I know through bitter experience. smile

Edited by monthefish on Monday 19th August 14:26

GP335i

Original Poster:

466 posts

164 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
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Craikeybaby said:
That looks really good! Does it stand out compared to the others on the street?
Yeah it definately stands out, there's not another like it in the street! It'll almost look out of place once the garage goes up and it's been re-rendered haha.

That will change though as many of the older people who've lived here all their lives are starting to drop off.

GP335i

Original Poster:

466 posts

164 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
quotequote all
Monthefish, you're right mate it's already bugging me! Thinking about trying a leaf blower as my folks have one. It was great for a week as my missus was cleaning out the stones but her enthusiasm didn't last.

GP335i

Original Poster:

466 posts

164 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
quotequote all
Here's a few pics I took at the weekend after repointing some of the knackered bricks in the step and re-cladding the decking with leftover cedar wood.








Chr1sch

2,585 posts

193 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
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Really really nice, love the cladding, if you dont mind me asking, how much did the cladding on the front cost?

We've just bought a 60@s house covered in UPVC cladding and its awful, this would be a massive improvement!

rednotdead

1,215 posts

226 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
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oldgreg said:
The facias were painted a RAL anthracite grey colour to match the new front door which is a Hormann TPS700 (waited 8 weeks for it!).
Liking the door. We have a Hormann too with a stainless tread which finishes it off just right.

oldgreg said:
The 3 square pots at beside the front door are grade 304 stainless steel, one of my favourite features!! I got all 4 items made by a guy I found on ebay for about £300 which I thought was bloody cheap!
Got a username for the ebay chap? Need some pots similar to yours making up, they are all silly prices round here.


anonymous-user

54 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
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Looks fab well done!

GP335i

Original Poster:

466 posts

164 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
quotequote all
Chr1sch said:
Really really nice, love the cladding, if you dont mind me asking, how much did the cladding on the front cost?

We've just bought a 60@s house covered in UPVC cladding and its awful, this would be a massive improvement!
Sure, the cedar for the cladding and soffits came to about £1200, budget another £50 for a 5kg box of stainless steel nails. The joiner took £2.5k to fit it all but this included new facias all round (supplied by him), tower scaffold hire and fitting the front door. Google silvatimber for the wood, if its got to come any far distance though call up first and tell them to beef up the packaging, I had 3 or 4 deliveries with a lot of damaged boards!

Have to agree on the PVC, although long lasting its not my favourite material.

GP335i

Original Poster:

466 posts

164 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
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Rednotdead, his username is inspiredsteel.

The guy really couldn't have been more helpful, he even made my pots 10cm higher than his standard size as I thought 30cm would be too low. You're right though the price people charge for these is crazy!

Andrew[MG]

3,322 posts

198 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
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The front door looks nice but what's so special about Hormann? I take it they aren't cheap so they must have some selling points?

GP335i

Original Poster:

466 posts

164 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
quotequote all
For me it was the style/colour options to be honest, I couldn't find another door I liked the look of. They are incredibly secure though, there is no external door handle and the hinged side has additional pins preventing it being forced open. The door skin in steel, it's fully insulated and the glass is triple glazed. If you get the chance to see one in the flesh do it, they are in my opinion a bargain for the quality compared to their competitors. Also, they are a bit cheaper if you order the Garador equivalent. They are the exact same, i did this and mine turned up stamped hormann and all the packaging was Hormann.

rednotdead

1,215 posts

226 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
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GP335i said:
Rednotdead, his username is inspiredsteel.

The guy really couldn't have been more helpful, he even made my pots 10cm higher than his standard size as I thought 30cm would be too low. You're right though the price people charge for these is crazy!
Thanks thumbup

74merc

594 posts

192 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
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That is a lovely job! I've been eyeing up 70's houses locally, just for the purpose of doing a conversion such as this. I would paint the render white, although that would probably work best with grey window frames, which would be hard to justify replacing if the frames were sound.

E31Shrew

5,922 posts

192 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
quotequote all
74merc said:
That is a lovely job! I've been eyeing up 70's houses locally, just for the purpose of doing a conversion such as this. I would paint the render white, although that would probably work best with grey window frames, which would be hard to justify replacing if the frames were sound.
We're just about to do this. Selling a house built in 1902 for one built in the early 70s. Its a total mess but with some serious planning we should end up with a stunning house.

Heres an interesting site if you havent seen it already

www.backtofrontdesign.com

Just shows what can be done

GP335i

Original Poster:

466 posts

164 months

Tuesday 20th August 2013
quotequote all
74merc said:
That is a lovely job! I've been eyeing up 70's houses locally, just for the purpose of doing a conversion such as this. I would paint the render white, although that would probably work best with grey window frames, which would be hard to justify replacing if the frames were sound.
The Render isn't the best tbh, it's dry dash, blowing in places and they've took it down to ground level bridging the DPC. We don't have any problems because of this but it's on the list, looking at doing a wet dash with a fine grit instead of stones so it'll have a bit of texture. Then of course painted white.

Next job is a new roof though before winter sets in.