Crack on, love a building project
Not 100% sure if others are interested but just embarking on a kitchen extension in my 2 bed terraced house - as always on a budget
Background
I’m retired - 55 last week- pretty handy at most things - although probably my ex wife would disagree
I bought the house around 4 years ago and have been refurbishing it room by room
It was owned by an elderly couple who went into a home
The kitchen / conservatory is the last room and has been on my radar for the last year
My SIL’s dads a chippy and is doing most of the construction work with my assistance- I’m paying him a day rate and buying all the materials
The concrete slab was in situ and housed an 80’s conservatory (diy)
2 mates and I dismantled it yesterday and took most to the tip the same day
Hope you enjoy - I will ‘cost it’ if folks are interested
The extension is approx 2.5m x 3.8m
Pic one - sales pics from when I bought it
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
The conservatory before demolition yesterday
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
I’d started earlier in the year by removing the monstrosity that was the chimney in the kitchen - brick by brick
Last year I’d removed this in the loft and bedroom above while renovating
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Last edited by lewie; 30th July 2023 at 08:08.
Crack on, love a building project
I take it something is going under that join
Love it. Coming along nicely
Always find this type of thread interesting, so please keep us up to date with your progress and good luck.
P.S. it reminds me of a post on here where someone bought a large house and was doing a total renovation. Must have been about 4 or 5 years ago. Don’t know where it went.
My last house was an 1890s mid-terrace with a chimney on the first floor but neither sticking out of the roof or in the kitchen below. When I took the room above back to bare bones I discovered the chimney stack on the first floor was being held in place by one plank of wood with parquet floor pieces as wedges.
Anyway, please do keep this updated.
"A man of little significance"
Thanks
I originally had the thought of brick slips for where the chimney was but like the charm of the originals so I carefully removed and turned the 1/2 bricks I’d broken - reused some bricks on replacing a concrete lintel - repointed and sealed the brickwork
Bought a new range and reshuffled the kitchen - and last picture is the current lay out just utilising the units I had
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
This is how it looked after the dismantle - took 3 of us just the morning on Friday
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Started framing out the sides and lifting into place on the floor plate
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
1st side up
Studwork - 11mm OSB, membrain,battening then T&G plastic to both sides- the front is 90% bifold with cedral cladding above and either side
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Last edited by lewie; 30th July 2023 at 08:10.
Steel work arriving Monday the whole back walls coming out between window and door
Hopefully by tuesday night the roof should be on ready for the flat roof
There will be a 1M x 1M lantern light in the centre of the roof
My rough guess is
Materials -£2200
Bifold 2.8m -£2700
Roof lantern 1m square -£1100
Steel work £700
Structural engineer (steel calculations) £200
Electrical I will tackle ( just extend the kitchen ring)
Plastering out - my brother will do (free)
SIL’s dad - not sure just paying him a day rate
Then I’ll put in new flooring for the whole new room and fit a new kitchen - possibly look a benchmarx
Last edited by lewie; 6th March 2024 at 21:47.
Awesome. Such a valuable skill to be able to do this type of thing yourself in this day and age, when it's so expensive to hire someone. How did you learn all this? Were you in a related trade pre-retirement? I'm alright with a bit of flat-pack but any more than that and I'm useless
I was a postman then RM manager - I bought my 1st house at 19 and have always tried to learn new skills but the ‘brains’ behind this is my daughters father in law - same age as me and carpenter by trade but really can turn his hand to most building tasks - I really take my hat off to him
I’m just a 55 year old apprentice
Excellent effort and great to follow such a project. Looks like you are saving a fortune compared to engaging a builder. Not to mention the exercise and feel good factor.
Thanks for this thread!
As always, pictures like this help a lot to give us an idea how you're tackling the job. I really love the stones behind the stove. What did you do to 'seal' in the black spots?
Nice project. I’ve used that plastic t&g on a stud work lean to, that we had on a previous property as a daytime dog house with dog flap into part of the garden. It really works well. Last I heard from old neighbors it’s still there!
Nowhere near as nicely done as yours but served its purpose.
Started out with nothing. Still have most of it left.
The ‘soot’ ? I raked out all the joints and repointed - I dyed the ‘soot’ mortar with black cement dye then painted on 3 coats of Matt brick sealant - I’m keeping the range here so will be the resistant splash back for the hob
I used this- great stuff need to reapply while still wet
https://www.screwfix.com/p/no-nonsen...E&gclsrc=aw.ds
This one?
https://forum.tz-uk.com/showthread.p...n-offer-advice
Stunning result, that.
It’s deeply satisfying doing this kind of stuff yourself…. I’ve always tried to do bits and bobs and when it comes off it feels great…
love a build thread, really wish I had the skills of some DIYers , I'm hopeless!
I’ve seen that house in the flesh and the level of detail and furnishings is just astonishing.
Sent from my iPhone using TZ-UK mobile app
Just had a delivery of all the roof timbers, wall insulation and steels - all ferried around the back by hand - worn out now
Keeping my fingers cross the weather is ok for later - light rain so far most of the day but it stopped for now- forecast says dry from. 4pm
Last edited by lewie; 10th August 2023 at 22:37.
That’s crazy quick progress!!
On the last but one photo I assume you built the box to raise the velux roof light? We did something similar in a renovation in County Kerry with a flat roof bathroom out the back over the shower and it gives a very impressive effect from the inside.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Managed to dodge the rain and get the roof on tonight ready for the felt
All tarped up for the uk summer Cedral coming Wednesday roof lantern arriving Friday
Just chasing the bifold now - was told a 2 week lead time - 3 weeks ago when I confirmed my order
Not very exciting pics but a great sunset
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
How thick are the exterior studwalls going to be? And how much insulation will be going in? Will it comply with building regulations? (Asking for a friend!!)
Stud work is 100mm faced (100mm foil faced insulation board ) with 11mm osb (vapour barrier) 25mm battening then 9mm hollow T&G soffit board
Another 20mm foil faced insulation board over the whole of the interior- so that 120mm of insulation in the walls plus the OSB T&G and plasterboard
Will it comply with building regs - honestly I don’t really care😂 - it won’t be inspected
It’s no larger larger the building it is replacing and is 100 x more insulated
I will contact the local authorities
The building was/ insured
I’m not planning on moving anytime soon
I had a similar situation. It was a trigger's broom sort of situation. The entire unit was repaired to the point of it being replaced. But the LBC weren't informed as it was a "repair". had no issues when it came to selling.
Like Lewie the replacement was much better than what was there.
I don't doubt the quality of your work, it looks great. It's just worth following the correct procedure to cover yourself. Insurance companies will do anything not to pay out on a claim, so if you had a fire, they'd immediately claim the structure wasn't safe because you couldn't prove otherwise.
Likewise when you come to sell, any buyers solicitor will want evidence of Final certificates from Building Control, Electrical and Gas in the extension. If you get a building control inspector round quickly they'll be able to see what's been done before it's covered over with plasterboard, roof and cladding.
If you are removing the existing window/door and/or wall in between, the extension will fail Building Regs on inadequate insulation. Your new rear doors (and rooflight) can be a max size of 20% of the floor area - anything over that and you need to over-insulate to compensate. 120mm Kingspan in the walls or similar won’t be near enough.
Additionally if the distance to the boundary is less than 1m then the extension needs to resist the spread of fire which it doesn’t appear to currently - PVC cladding and plasterboard either side of the timber stud.
It doesn’t have enough glazing to qualify as a conservatory so full Building Regs would be required. This means foundations to 1m depth or structural calcs to prove existing are OK, min 100mm min insulation in the floor etc etc. Bit of a can of worms really.
If it’s taller than 3m (excluding rooflight) it won’t be Permitted Development for planning. In planning terms, “replacing what was there” isn’t lawful development.
Last edited by benny.c; 23rd August 2023 at 14:24.
Only asking as doing something similar but decided not to remove a wall as then the insulation bit would fall foul with building regs. If it's your forever home no problems I suppose. Also if necessary you could reinstate a thicker complying stud wall between extension and your house.
I appreciate this my existing glazed, wooden back door and single glazed window I think cover more area than the bifold but I doubt it matters
The building is within 1m as was the existing one - I could probably overcome this if necessary with Cedral cladding to both sides
It’s under 3m tall
Maybe I’ve made a massive mistake and it will have to be demolished
Last edited by lewie; 16th August 2023 at 18:57.
You may be able to get enough insulation in but if you’re going to involve Building Control, get them in sooner rather than later so you’re not undoing anything.
The 1m rule to the boundary wouldn’t apply to your old extension as it was a conservatory but will for the new one. The fire risk is from the inside so adding the Cedral cladding may not help overall with fire resistance as your timber frame would catch fire and collapse before the Cedral could add resistance. Speak to Building Control, they may let you double up on the plasterboard if required or recommend a FireLine board instead. Probably a good idea to use the Cedral anyway as you need fire resistance on the outside too (if within 1m of a boundary).
Last edited by benny.c; 16th August 2023 at 20:08.
I’d just keep quiet and enjoy your extension
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I’m going to place fire retardant (pink) plasterboard on the interior- 15mm - I can add the Cedral later
Bit of an update if anyone is interested
I folds fitted a couple of weeks ago
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Cedral installed last week
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Yesterday/ today a couple of my daughter’s friends fitted a fiberglass roof and also popped on the lantern
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
Untitled by biglewie, on Flickr
I like the lantern!!! Can you tell me where you bought it please?
Oh, and can you tell me what you used to cover the top of your upstand?
The whole thing looks really nice btw :0)
Last edited by redmonaco; 16th September 2023 at 10:49.
We use https://www.korniche.co.uk/ for lanterns.
for the upstand like that we would use a preformed GRP trims: D260 GRP wall fillet, and cover the top with G150 90° External angle trim.
It's looking good with the grey cladding on.
Nearly the same as I’ve done
The lanterns 1000 x 1000 internal and I bought it locally from( it’s a korniche 1152 x 1152) grey/ white with ambi blue tinted glass
https://srsupvc.co.uk/folkestone
The upstanding is made from a timber frame with kingspan insulation inside and covered in OSB
The tops covered with angle trim as above
The guy who did the roof offered to fit the lantern so I accepted
The lantern is very well constructed and thought out - only needing a bead of silicon to bed onto the upstand
Thanks for the comment the Cedral cladding is very nice and pretty easy to work with (colour pewter)
Last edited by lewie; 16th September 2023 at 11:35.