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...and all done for £450
doubtful
They said £450K last night 😉
[swift edit]Waddaya mean?[swift edit]
Good house though eh?
Uncle Kevin lost his touch? she didn't appear to be preggers at the end.
I liked it too. Nice house for £450[b]K[/b]
Turned out ok seeing they bought it with the sole intention of biffing it over and building a traditional family home on the cheap land.
Plus the hanger door on the rear seemed a bit out of place.
......and couldn't see many environmental considerations in the finished house either...
But would still rather spend my £450k on that than a 2 bed flat in London.
The hanger door was a bit ridiculous but the bloke looked so pleased with it.
£450K could have bought the whole of THORNE FOR THAT!!!
The door was a snagging nightmare and will be replaced with bifolds within 2 years! Loved the concrete, sod the Eco!
There was a lot i didn't like about that project, most of it stems from the architect. My comment to Mrs mW was "they'd never have employed this fella if he wasn't already a mate".
The couple however seemed really nice and I hope they enjoy their new home.
The trailer for next weeks looks much more entertaining. I imagine we can all stand united in condemnation come 10pm next Wednesday.
The plot has been derelict for years, as is much of Thorne. Good that the site is re-used. It looks nice, but if you know the street, you just think, £450K to live there? There's a 5 bed detached with granny annexe round the corner from there for £230K. I own a three bed semi a mile and a half away I paid £60k for. Nothing fundamental wrong with Thorne, but it's got no real industry and is in the wrong place to be a commuter town to anywhere with money. So it's marooned and getting shabbier as the years roll on since the jobs went. It's stuck between Doncaster, Goole and S****horpe and short of building EuroDisney2 on the cheap land in all directions, no-one is moving there soon. Still, their money, and they seemed to like it. There's another Grand Design near me, from series 1, and that's concrete too. Wonder if it's a Doncaster thing?
I did like it but.....
400 tons of concrete... Totally Irresponsible!
Could of done it in planks and sprayed it grey!
Didn't see that one.
But having worked with telly crew, and having seen the story of that daft mill one, if I do watch an ep I'm always trying to work out the real story behind all the sensationalised story.
Out in the sticks is common though. Friends in Les Gets mention the one they did there. Sold as a luxury ski chalet, and is about as far from Les Gets and ski lifts as you can get afaik. Twice as far as the bulk of the most distant ski chalets.
Still. It's all other people's money to spend as they wish.
Enjoy:
The stack of containers in front of it is a nursery, currently for sale. The concrete and glass thing is on the site of the former mowers/gardeners shed for the field, the nursery used to be a petrol station, it was developed by the same guy who built the house.
£450k in Thorne near Doncaster!
Streuth when I read the first post I thought there must be another Thorne (I originally come from just up the road).
Although compared to the Location, Location, Location that I caught the middle of last night, where the young couple for some reason thought spending the best part of half a mill. on a flat was better than buying a bigger house in the same area... 'cos he didn't yet feel 'grown-up'. 🙄
90k for the land. 350k for all the building and fees? Not sure I believe the budget to be honest - that's an awful lot of concrete. not cheap.
Outbuilding, pool. The door they're offering for about 15k but they must have paid at least 10 for theirs - probably more as it needed rework.
The door and pool (in Yorkshire?) were only things I really didn't like though - place looked great.
Having watched it properly now they did a good job, and if you want to live in Thorne may as well do it in style.
Not sure about the pool, but their kids seem to enjoy it. I loved the house, and I really like the door, it means you can have it open when it's raining and sit underneath it, enjoying fresh air, so long as it isn't cold. Great build, and a really nice couple. Looking forwards to this week's.
can have it open when it's raining and sit underneath it, so long as it isn't cold
and theres no wind. It was 4m high - a lot could blow under it. Frustratingly slow to open as well.
Very nice. I like concrete ...
Why such a small pool?
I liked them and I liked the build but the cinema room really got my goat. I mean come on, a sofa? May as well call it a second lounge. They should have some tiered seating and a bigger bloody screen as standard.
Hydro pool, you basically swim on the spot, far cheaper to maintain and doubles up as a tub.
Although compared to the Location, Location, Location that I caught the middle of last night, where the young couple for some reason thought spending the best part of half a mill. on a flat was better than buying a bigger house in the same area... 'cos he didn't yet feel 'grown-up'.
I saw that. The first flat in Wimbledon, I thought, yeah nice, maybe 250k (thinking that's a lot of money, coming from Newcastle) 415k 😯
While talking of wimbledon there was a Move To The Country episode where they moved from Wimbledon to Weybridge.
Yeah rolling pastures and tractors as far as the eye can see!
400 tons of concrete... Totally Irresponsible!Could of done it in planks and sprayed it grey
But concrete will last a lot longer and use a lot less energy to heat a building than if you use timber, so not so irresponsible 8)
concrete...will use a lot less energy to heat a building than if you use timber
er. no. Try going to live in a building with solid stone or concrete walls and tell us how warm it feels.
What will reduce your heating costs is insulation and you can wrap that around the structure whatever it's made of. A lot of thermal mass can help stabilise temperatures - it takes some time to heat up and then will give that heat out a period. However, that effect is lost pretty quickly if you have a period of sustained hot or cold weather. Also means the house takes a long while to react when you try to make it warmer
Try going to live in a building with solid stone or concrete walls
Here's the sciencey bit:
Here's the sciencey bit:
Brought to you by [i]the central development organisation for the UK concrete industry[/i] 😀
Hydro pool, you basically swim on the spot, far cheaper to maintain and doubles up as a tub.
Where's the fun in that though? It would be ok for someone who is would prefer to run on treadmills but it's hardly what you want for a pool party. They have so much space too.
Did anybody else think things were dubious? 'entrepreneur' is generally what people say when they don't want others to know what they really do. He didn't seem that switched on and appeared somewhat immature. Also what businessmen do you know that are prepared to take 6 months out of work to labour on a building site - their efforts are usually much more appropriately deployed in their business. I'm calling family money.
He didn't seem that switched on
He didn't seem the sharpest knife in the drawer. The best he could muster as an analysis of the aesthetics of building in concrete was "I really like concrete"
[quote=daveky said]Did anybody else think things were dubious? 'entrepreneur' is generally what people say when they don't want others to know what they really do.
It was mentioned on the proggy that he ran an educational software business so probably a very small outfit (one man band?) with low overheads (concrete ones? 😉 ).
Loads of info on his business if you google Gwyn ap Harri
Brought to you by the central development organisation for the UK concrete industry
Indeed. I'm not claiming to be an expert on this but have done a fair bit of reading on the subject. Whilst there is definitely benefit to having some thermal mass a huge amount is not always beneficial.
[i]"Thermal mass is most appropriate in climates with a large diurnal temperature range. As a rule of thumb, diurnal ranges of less than 6°C are insufficient; 7°C to 10°C can be useful depending on climate; where they exceed 10°C, high mass construction is desirable"[/i]
I think the UK range is usually quite small - most parts don't get extremes of temperature, and when we do the daily range is fairly small (nothings far from the sea.)
A huge amount of thermal mass wouldn't have been much benefit during either the cold extremes of this last winter (when it stayed cold day and night) nor in the recent heatwave (when night time temperatures were still high).
Director at realsmart (smartassess)
Anyone else read that as smart arses at first glance?
