The ups and downs of buying our first house - the journey will be long and there will be tales to tell
Monday, 29 November 2010
The Skip
This may look like a lot of rubbish and dirt but this marks a very important day in the progress of our house renovation.
The builders have left and the house is now free of strangers. On this skip you will see a bathroom and kitchen and lots of very old carpets and underlay. Good riddance!
Sunday, 28 November 2010
The Garden - Little Shop of Horrors
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A peak at the shed that is no longer |
Judging by the rest of the house, it won't be a surprise to see the garden is completely overgrown. At first we thought it would be as easy as hiring a strimmer for a day or two and just chopping down the overgrown shrubs. As with every other hurdle so far, this was simply not the case.
Mr V spent days burning shrubs that had grown over the patio and managed to successfully clear some space but then we discovered that this wasn't enough. At the back of the garden there was a lot of work to be revealed...
We called in some wonderful help on a very cold November day (Thanks MM) and discovered that the garden wasn't just overgrown and in need of some TLC, it was completely taken over by plants that had roots so big that it took two grown men to carve through them all day. The plants had wrapped themselves round brick walls and fences and even pushed their way through the bricks and mortar.
Friday, 26 November 2010
The Bathroom Update
The bathroom is coming along nicely - the tiling is completed with just a little bit more grouting to do. The bath, sink and toilet are all in place and it's not long before the water is connected.
Monday, 22 November 2010
The Bathroom Floor
No Damp?
We thought we'd escaped the damp!! Very wrong.. Despite being told we didn't have damp and taking all precautions to fend off future damp, we suddenly discovered that the kitchen walls were dripping with water. Damp from the bricks.
This now means that everything else is delayed. We can't plaster board the walls or screed the floor until the damp dries out. We can't connect the electrics until the damp dries out. We can't connect the central heating until the damp dries out.
Nothing is going to get in our way. We made our way to the local hire shop and this is what we hired for the weekend: Industrial strength space blower.
This now means that everything else is delayed. We can't plaster board the walls or screed the floor until the damp dries out. We can't connect the electrics until the damp dries out. We can't connect the central heating until the damp dries out.
Nothing is going to get in our way. We made our way to the local hire shop and this is what we hired for the weekend: Industrial strength space blower.
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Space blower up close |
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Damp on renders in the corners |
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Calor gas operating the space blower |
Friday, 19 November 2010
The Back of the House
Finally things are looking brighter. (from the outside at least) Despite still not having plastered walls, ceiling or floors, running water or gas in our kitchen, we do now have a new back door in the place we want it. We've closed up two door frames that we found covered in damp plaster while closing two windows and creating garden facing window.
The new brick work really stands out but next summer we will be having all the brickwork weathered so hopefully we can get it to look less obvious than in these photos. The old brick work is particularly dusty - this is due to recently having all the outside rendering removed to expose the bricks.
Now we have the kitchen structure, including windows, walls and doors in the right place, next stop is the plastering and plumbing inside the kitchen....
The new brick work really stands out but next summer we will be having all the brickwork weathered so hopefully we can get it to look less obvious than in these photos. The old brick work is particularly dusty - this is due to recently having all the outside rendering removed to expose the bricks.
Now we have the kitchen structure, including windows, walls and doors in the right place, next stop is the plastering and plumbing inside the kitchen....
Sunday, 14 November 2010
The Damp
The good news is that we don't have rising damp. We don't have wood worm or rot! But we do have regular damp in the kitchen; the entire kitchen.
Before we commence the plastering in the kitchen, we invited a damp inspector round from Kenwood Plc. (http://www.kenwoodplc.co.uk//index.php) We suspected there was damp as we knew water was getting trapped in between the brick and the outside rendering before we pulled it off. This may have been there for many, many years before we removed the rendering.
Today the engineers arrived with drills and lots of chemicals. First they drilled holes around the three kitchen walls from the inside and the outside about 6 inches apart. Each hole was filled with a damp proof course and injected with a chemical that makes the walls waterproof. Around the bottom 6 inches of the wall from the floor up, a grey gel was pasted on. This is a technique called Tanking. We had to have this done as the ground outside of the house is too high so we need to take extra precaution against damp.
Once this damp treatment dries, we will have 1 metre high of rendering plastered on the walls before we can dry line the walls.
Before we commence the plastering in the kitchen, we invited a damp inspector round from Kenwood Plc. (http://www.kenwoodplc.co.uk//index.php) We suspected there was damp as we knew water was getting trapped in between the brick and the outside rendering before we pulled it off. This may have been there for many, many years before we removed the rendering.
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Rear wall with damp showing through the brick |
Today the engineers arrived with drills and lots of chemicals. First they drilled holes around the three kitchen walls from the inside and the outside about 6 inches apart. Each hole was filled with a damp proof course and injected with a chemical that makes the walls waterproof. Around the bottom 6 inches of the wall from the floor up, a grey gel was pasted on. This is a technique called Tanking. We had to have this done as the ground outside of the house is too high so we need to take extra precaution against damp.
Once this damp treatment dries, we will have 1 metre high of rendering plastered on the walls before we can dry line the walls.
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Right side of kitchen with grey layer of Tanking |
Friday, 12 November 2010
Priorities
The Sky dish and tv cables were installed today. We still don't have a kitchen, bathroom or doors but I now have a very happy man.
The Doors
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Behind the chipboard |
Today they were collected by a company called Dip and Strip; a company that are known for renovating old, tired doors. They are put into a vat of chemicals that strips and removes all of the old paint. Hopefully they will be returned to us looking restored and ready for painting. http://www.dipnstrip.net
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Taking out the nails that have been hammered around the entire door |
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The door, uncovered! |
Sunday, 7 November 2010
The Bathroom - Part 1
The kitchen is going to be a huge job so we're clearing the space, starting the rewiring, putting up the new walls, new ceilings and if all goes to plan, we will have a blank canvas in 3 weeks.
Let's move our focus to the bathroom instead...
This is how it currently looks.
Our bathroom fitter is meeting us at the house tomorrow to start stripping the walls and taking the suite out. Timing wise, we may have a new bathroom within 2 weeks.
Really useful websites that we have been ordering from are:
http://www.victoriaplumb.com/
http://www.bestbathrooms.com/
Let's move our focus to the bathroom instead...
This is how it currently looks.
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Hole in the ceiling. |
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Front facing in the bathroom. |
Our bathroom fitter is meeting us at the house tomorrow to start stripping the walls and taking the suite out. Timing wise, we may have a new bathroom within 2 weeks.
Really useful websites that we have been ordering from are:
http://www.victoriaplumb.com/
http://www.bestbathrooms.com/
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