1960's to now : our renovation

1960's to now : our renovation

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croakey

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

188 months

Tuesday 7th July 2015
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Intending on using this to help myself (and anyone else interested) keep track of an upcoming renovation.

So some background!




Its a detached late 60's 3 bed in South East England and needs some TLC and reconfiguring to make it work.

It is VERY original inside however in seemingly good condition. There is a whole 60 years of technology and decoration to catch up on... admittedly it looks to have had some minor work done mid 80's for ultra retro status.

Heres some really amateur floorplans i've done from memory (why people dont pay the minor cost when advertising a house for a floor plan i do not know!)

Ground Floor




First Floor



The plan:

1) The house has some issues with some minor cracks above the upstairs windows, awaiting the surveyors report but my builder thinks its either poorly fitted UPVC windows, or owing to it having concrete lintels that may need repair/replacing





Hoping this comes back as a relatively simple fix as we're planning on having the whole place plastered anyway.

2) The existing boiler is around 7 or 8 years old, we're intending on removing this (and the hot water tank in the airing cupboard) and replacing it with a combi boiler, where it is going to be located is yet to be confirmed.

3) New bathroom - by removing the airing cupboard we gain a decent amount of space in the bathroom that can then be utilised for a shower.

4) New kitchen - also links into the questions below, but the existing kitchen is more than likely original and very very very tired! Looking for anyone with reviews for diykitchens.com as they seem to be a decent choice.

5) A log burner, the missus' only major thing is she wants a log burner! Property has an existing brick chimney behind the gas fire so in theory quite a simple job and we'll build a decorative chimney breast to give the room some character.

6) Possibly new windows all round, this will be based on the issues with the lintels, should they need work and windows removed it makes sense in my mind to put new ones back in.

7) Fully redecorate (the pictures above dont really show how naff the decor is!)

My main gripe is the existing downfloors layout - anyone have any suggestions on how to improve this? We're looking at cost vs value for conservatories and extensions (either full width or partial). Leaning towards possibly a conservatory across the span of the living room based on cost?





Edited by croakey on Wednesday 8th July 12:21


Edited by croakey on Monday 26th September 13:37

croakey

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

188 months

Tuesday 7th July 2015
quotequote all
And seeing as everyone likes pictures heres some of our current house - hoping to achieve a similar level of finish on the new one.










croakey

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

188 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2015
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Bit of a boring update but survey is back and all seems good, no surprises and confirms a number of suspicions with regards to pointing being required etc etc.

Next up is to get back in there and get measurements and pictures needed to organise and plan the upcoming works.

I promise the next update will be more interesting!

castex

4,936 posts

273 months

Monday 3rd August 2015
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I might be looking at making a kitchen / diner out of the current lounge, with bifolds or similar leading out into the garden. Plumbing exists directly above so not too much of a stretch. That frees up the present kitchen for a sitting room and make a library / study out of the existing dining room.

croakey

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

188 months

Monday 3rd August 2015
quotequote all
Unfortunately those pictures are no where near to scale...





These are the correct measurements and as such the kitchen space is probably too small to be a lounge?

The current favoured plan is to leave the kitchen in situ, and then build a small extension off the living room to form a garden (possibly a dining) room. To add to the mix we have two house cats that need some space of their own so that they dont destroy the entire house with their antisocial behaviour.



The wife is insistent on having a wood burner fitted which would logically be in the current living room as there is an existing chimney we can utilise.


croakey

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

188 months

Wednesday 23rd September 2015
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Finally something worth looking at!

Eventually moved in this week following some tense weeks dealing with our buyer asking strange questions.

So some pictures (taken before the previous owners had finished clearing it)

Kitchen




Living room





Bathroom



One of the bedrooms...



Unfortunately the "drive" was designed for a 60's car which presumably were narrow bodied as the wife's mini will fit but you can't open the doors!



As I said at the beginning its nothing particularly special and far from worthy for a powerfully built company director... But I'll try to keep it up to date and interesting!

Talking of which, any hints on how to clean this brickwork up? Has a green film growing over it, not sure to blast with pressure washer or use some form of acid?





maxest

304 posts

218 months

Wednesday 23rd September 2015
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Nice house look forward to the updates

Simpo Two

85,352 posts

265 months

Wednesday 23rd September 2015
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Should be good! Just take it one room at a time, there's a lot to do and some decisions you cna only make as you go. If the ceilings need skimming to cover old artex, do those all first.

croakey

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

188 months

Wednesday 23rd September 2015
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Luckily a good friend is a plasterer... I'll keep him busy 😁

Hard-Drive

4,079 posts

229 months

Wednesday 23rd September 2015
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If you can get that to the same standard as your old house that's going to look great.

Du1point8

21,606 posts

192 months

Wednesday 23rd September 2015
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are you going to tidy up the outside?

something like from this:



to this



Or just give it a jet wash and clean up the interior?

croakey

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

188 months

Wednesday 23rd September 2015
quotequote all
I would love to go all out and completely modernise the front as per the above photos. However the entire area is of a similar style to this house and it would stand out like a sore thumb and possibly decrease its value long term.

I'm leaning towards getting the cladding cleaned up and seeing how I feel then. Sadly this house had been empty for around a year before so it's just in dire need of a clean!

croakey

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

188 months

Friday 25th September 2015
quotequote all
Anyone care to share experiences on installing a combi boiler in the loft?

Would gain us some valuable space where we need it?


Peanut Gallery

2,426 posts

110 months

Friday 25th September 2015
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Can't say about a combi in the loft, just to say my combi is on the wall above the royal throne, makes for nice short runs to all the hot taps in the flat mansion, if thought out they don't take up much room.

What about giving the bricks a go with jetwash to clean them? - Keep the updates coming please!

Gingerbread Man

9,171 posts

213 months

Friday 25th September 2015
quotequote all
croakey said:
Anyone care to share experiences on installing a combi boiler in the loft?

Would gain us some valuable space where we need it?
Go for it. Need a water main up there. Insulate it all obviously, probably at frost protection if it's not built in. You could add a remote filling loop and pressure gauge if you fancy to save popping into the loft to check.
Technically the loft needs to he boarded, and the hatch fenced off for safety and accessability, but 90% of plumbers won't be anal about it when installing.

croakey

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

188 months

Friday 25th September 2015
quotequote all
Fortunately the loft already has a decent ladder, a good amount of boarding, and more importantly a proper lighting system.

One thing we've been fortunate with is the garden, it would seem the previous owners dedicated a lot of time and effort to it. Various roses and other stuff I don't recognise - currently looking to recruit a decently priced gardener/ pensioner to help maintain it as beyond cutting the lawn badly gardens aren't my thing.

On the plus side it seems that south facing and decent foliage attracts wildlife


croakey

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

188 months

Wednesday 14th October 2015
quotequote all
An update of sorts...

I've got a commercial cleaning team booked in for next week to clean all the cladding and brickwork, combined with a gardener this should improve the kerb appeal over night.

Had a quote for a replacement boiler locating it in the airing cupboard, this will coincide with cutting the aircupbord depth down to maximise bathroom space. Ontop of this he's going to relocate and replace a couple of radiators. To go with this my Nest v3 arrived this afternoon... Keen to see if it lives up to the hype!

Had a quote for Windows and doors which came in a lot higher than I imagined and will probably mean we need to wait a period of time to do them. On the plus side the windows are still serviceable just old.

Will be getting the porch glazing and door replaced ASAP and a radiator fitted out there alongside some insulated plasterboard.

Had a quote of 2.1k to replace the patio doors (which are ancient) with bifolds. My gut feeling is that this expensive but would appreciate some feedback.

Kitchen is planned :


But now need to decide whether to go with howdens or diy-kitchens? Likely to go with Bosch appliances if anyone has a source ??








I've not got pictures to demonstrate it but we're also looking at moving the door to the living room to make it a more useful shape...

Craikeybaby

10,402 posts

225 months

Wednesday 14th October 2015
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Where did you get the window quote from? They can vary quite a lot for what is pretty much the same thing. It is worth speaking to a smaller local company, than one who has shiny suited salesmen and radio/TV adverts to pay for.

croakey

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

188 months

Wednesday 14th October 2015
quotequote all
This was a friend of a friend small time company... Porch is £1350, windows and doors £7k and bifolds £2100. Sadly We need to spend money elsewhere at the moment before shelling out windows for the sake of it

croakey

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

188 months

Tuesday 20th October 2015
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So some progress...

Before...


Some cleaning (by someone else) later...


And the gardeners begun to put a dent in our overgrown but well stocked garden.

Next challenge is to find a builder to come and solve the issue with our cracks (oooh er missus!)

Stripping woodchip wallpaper has revealed further cracks , research leads me to believe that this is old cracks (20+ years) and not current, fingers crossed a resin bonding session and overboarding will solve it all.