Remodelling downstairs on 1970’s semi
Nicola Jane
4 years ago
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Carolina
4 years agoRelated Discussions
Ideas for improving my 1970's semi detached house.
Comments (0)It's 3 bedrooms, small porch then straight into living room with the stairs in the living room. The attached garage has been converted into a spare room (access from living room) and an extension on the back of that is the kitchen. I have had the loft converted with 2 velux windows. oh and only one bathroom! Its a nice area, convenient for shops and entertainment. I had a new kitchen fitted about 7 years ago and a nice in the wall gas fire. I thought the children would leave and not come back but that was just wishful thinking, so now we have 4 adults and a 2 year grandchild living at home, and when the other daughter visits with husband and our new grandchild it is cosy! The son is sleeping on the couch. So, do I Do a wrap around extension upstairs and downstairs and redesign downstairs Just move to a bigger house 3. Pay for the kids to stay in a hotel when they come to stay? If you have ideas on number 1, could you give me an idea on cost please....See MoreRenovating 1970s uk semi
Comments (26)Paint....Urban obsession on left and night fever on right ... Surely I cud get away with this for a year or so? Took pictures of fireplace to a demolition yard ...he couldn't give me a proper estimate of what he would give me for it...u know what they are like!!! He said take it out and we will discuss ffs ! It's £450 to take out and render wall I don't have this money all our cash is goin on 'must haves' like rewire. Boiler, windows, kitchen... (crying face) Have no idea who could come and give me a proper valuation... I'm in Surrey near Croydon, CR6...See MoreExtension/house "remodel" advice needed please!
Comments (14)Ok, so I've never commented on Houzz before (despite being a huge reader) but the shape of your house really intrigued me as it's very charming but quite tricky. Looking at just the ground floor, I think that an extension that fills in the 'rectangle' floorpan of the whole house might work. The loo and shower should be moved so that they are not blocking off movement flowing through the ground floor. To get a bigger hallway you could move back the wall currently going into the kitchen, so that you incorporate the small window into the hall. Remove the wall by the stairs and turn the stairway itself into a feature which would make the hallway - and stairs themselves - feel much roomier (I can't see from your floorpan whether they are already open to the hallway). What's currently the kitchen could become a utility with downstairs loo (move the shower upstairs into new bathroom over new extension, taking a bit from bedroom 1?). I have recently had an extension kitchen built on our own house and turned the old (tiny) kitchen into a laundry/boot room - best decision ever with a growing family! In the utility room you could put in a stacked wash/tumbler (if you want a tumbler, or else just cupboards/laundry on top) and a downstairs loo, as well as more storage. In the new kitchen, you could have double/french/sliding/bifold doors as per your taste looking out SE into the garden, creating a long sightline - and feeling of space - from the garden right through the kitchen into the far room. This would create a spacious-feeling kitchen tied into the rest of the house. You could block up the door into the current dining room and take out the wall between the dining/living. Keeping the dining room as dining, this gives you a cosy room there for small intimate dinners but also the potential to have big dinner parties on a long extended table stretching out into the living room. When not entertaining, that slightly self-contained room (as it's not a through-route as is the rest of the house) could be used as a study/quieter reading room. You now have a house that is welcoming for entertaining - guests come through the front door, where there's space for coats/hatstands, straight through the open door into the living room and are greeted by the fireplace ahead of them, and look round to see the dining table. Downstairs loo for guests nicely separated from all the action. Please excuse my very rough sketch of what I mean, and its lack of scale!...See More1930's semi - small extension and remodel
Comments (24)We’re doing one sort of similar, our layout is slightly different as in the kitchen is a galley on the right hand side. The architect is doing plans at the minute. In your drawing, we’d be taking down the garden room/kitchen wall, dining/kitchen and opening the whole lot. A pillar will also be left where your kitchen entrance is at the left side and we’ll make a breakfast bar here. It’s over our 20k> budget to put in more beams and planning is more of a headache. We’ll see what the plans look like for this first though as this may very well change. We’re going to try for a utility also. The architect mentioned going out into the side driveway a little. I’d make your kitchen the whole back room area (cabinets on the far left) and make the sitting room a snug or even a utility room. I’d even widen those walls at the dining/kitchen doorway and you can put doors there for privacy if needed. Close up one of those hallway doors entering the kitchen diner. Have the kitchen open out into the garden for a feel of more space. Excuse the doodle ha ha....See MoreDanny Jay
4 years agoOnePlan
4 years agolast modified: 4 years agoNicola Jane
4 years agoUser
4 years ago
Nicola JaneOriginal Author