Our self-build - what do you think? (Pictures!)
Our self-build - what do you think? (Pictures!)
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Discussion

Tuna

Original Poster:

19,930 posts

307 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
quotequote all
So, the scaffold is down on our selfbuild... what do you think?

It's taken just under a year to build it and we've still got a bit of decorating to do. The house is in the local vernacular (one and a half stories, long and narrow and catslide dormers) and we've got a bit of space left for a garage and garden. After five years in a caravan, it's light, airy, warm, draught free and quite fantastically comfortable.



The boy's room:



A bit of the kitchen and gallery (need a wide angle lens)



Stone floor:


Simpo Two

91,318 posts

288 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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I like the galleried landing, but dormer windows can be bad news if you are tall and get up in the middle of the night!

JustinP1

13,357 posts

253 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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Simpo Two said:
I like the galleried landing, but dormer windows can be bad news if you are tall and get up in the middle of the night!
Not if you leave them open. smile

Tuna

Original Poster:

19,930 posts

307 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
I like the galleried landing, but dormer windows can be bad news if you are tall and get up in the middle of the night!
Loads of room in the bedrooms! The bottoms of the big beams are at eight foot, and the ceilings are nine foot something high so it's only in the corners that you run any risk of bumping your head.


FunkyCEO

162 posts

203 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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Looks great - gardens next!! lol

Did you ever update the blog or have more pictures/floorplan? Could you share total costs?

Simpo Two

91,318 posts

288 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
quotequote all
FunkyCEO said:
Could you share total costs?
I'm sure he'll be more than happy to invoice you for 50% biggrin

satans worm

2,456 posts

240 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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clap

Good work Tuna,

I take it the windows are ally, did they cost much more than UPVC? We just went the UPVC route and regretted it ever since, we have a big picture window to our vaulted lounge in ally and it looks superb in black.

Also love the guttering and downpipes, they will age nicely.

So, now your done, and living in it, I know you will think its worth it the sense of achievement is hard to compare, especially when you think it will be their long after your gone!

Any regrets though? minor ones like a room that could of been done with a foot or so more room, or a window that you would like to picke up and shift a few feet? or major ones such as 'why the hell did i think that would work' hehe

Might have to put ours on PH at some point, when its tidy enough to take photos of!!

What air pressure test rating did you get in the end, you were aiming high i seem to remember (well, high in aim, low in scoring )



Edited by satans worm on Tuesday 28th September 15:26

Wacky Racer

40,650 posts

270 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
FunkyCEO said:
Could you share total costs?
I'm sure he'll be more than happy to invoice you for 50% biggrin
hehe


Nice house btw.

deevlash

10,442 posts

260 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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Tuna said:
The boy's room:

needs more scalextric!

Spudler

3,985 posts

219 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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Well done. Not my cup of tea (a bit too european for my liking) but i can appreciate the work/graft thats gone into it.
The rainwater goods look very nice. Did you use K Render?

KenBlocksPants

7,388 posts

207 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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Looks great congratulations!

Any more pics of the outside / grounds or the lounge? Just being nosey!

Completing the garden will make it look even better too

Dave Dax builder

662 posts

282 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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All that open space above a kitchen! Hope your wifey doesn't boil too much cabbage or your bedrooms will smell like a Guinness drinkers toilet.

The draw bridges are a nice touch, but the moat needs more water.











P.S. Love it, well done.




Jasandjules

71,973 posts

252 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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Well done.

It must have been a long hard slog and it looks like it was well worth it!


Shaw Tarse

31,836 posts

226 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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5 years! Are you Petrocelli? wink

whirligig

941 posts

218 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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Great achievement! Love the stone flooring - more details please?

russ_a

4,706 posts

234 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
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whirligig said:
Great achievement! Love the stone flooring - more details please?
+1

Tuna

Original Poster:

19,930 posts

307 months

Tuesday 28th September 2010
quotequote all
Thanks for the great comments.

We've been so busy with the build that the blog is fantastically out of date. I'm planning a forensic reconstruction once I'm not spending the evenings putting up wallpaper, tiling, grouting, plumbing and fixing sockets onto walls. Total costs are currently unknown - we need to sit down and do our VAT claim, at which point we'll probably get a surprise. We certainly went over the £1000 per square metre 'ballpark' that we based the house size/budget on, but we managed not to run out of cash with a little help from family (the mortgage company went back on initial promises after the reality of the credit crisis hit).

The windows are Oak, with aluminium cladding - internally they look pretty traditional and externally we shouldn't need to paint or treat them for 20 years+. They are impressively high quality. The folding-sliding doors in the centre section match and are wonderful to throw open on a warm evening.

Any regrets? Not really. There are compromises in the house, but I think virtually all of them were part of the planning phase rather than things we 'got wrong' either in the design or build. It's amusing that people say it looks quite European - the tiles and render were the choice of the planners, who insisted they were very natural for the area. For those that don't know, the clay around here and for tens of miles all around is uniformly grey and most older houses were either finished in flint or timber. Of course it would be lovely if it was two foot bigger in every direction, but we were restricted by the planning rules which were particularly difficult as we're outside of any village boundary where any sort of new build is actively discouraged.

In design terms we are absolutely delighted in how well the house works. We've not put in all the 'built in' storage yet - no wardrobes in the bedrooms, but should be in a good state once that's done. It would have been nice to have an extra foot or so of space in the utility and family bathroom, but both still work well. The window cills in the dormers are actually an inch or so lower than ideal, but again not a problem.

No air pressure test yet - we've got to get our stove plumbed in first. No pictures of the lounge either as we've not decorated it yet, or got sofas. If anyone works in John Lewis, we know which one we want and can meet you round the back of the store with a pickup truck.

What else? The rainwater goods are Lindab, and the render is Weber - both to be recommended. The 'stone' floor is porcelain tiling over underfloor heating, lovely and warm in the morning.

The space above the kitchen isn't a problem for smells - we have whole house ventilation, so the place stays fresh and free of condensation or dust. If we really need to 'clear the air', there are two veluxes above the gallery which do the job.

Next year is going to be all about the garden and doing the garage.

OldSkoolRS

7,081 posts

202 months

Wednesday 29th September 2010
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What a lovely job, I bet you're glad to be in after living in a caravan all that time. I love watching these grand design type programs, but I know how much hard work it must be so I'd never dare do it myself (just spent the last six months on and off just doing a kitchen/dinning room knock through so who knows how long I'd take doing a whole house). I love the galleried areas, though something inside me makes me want to use the space for more room upstairs as my landing is very wasteful of space and the main bedroom could have been made bigger, so I'm biased I suppose.

Looking forward to next pictures and when you finish the garden and garage...more power to your elbow. smile

ndtman

752 posts

204 months

Wednesday 29th September 2010
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Shaw Tarse said:
5 years! Are you Petrocelli? wink
laugh

Howitzer

2,863 posts

239 months

Wednesday 29th September 2010
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I am not keen on the green exterior of the windows but the rest is absolutely gorgeous.

As has already been mentioned the guttering looks fantastic and will age nicely. It has character already which I think is hard to achieve in a new build.

A credit to those who built it.

Dave!