Dormer loft conversion

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I am contemplating a loft conversion. I measured from where the joins meet in the rafters to the joist/floorboards I had laid years ago and it came to approx 2.32m. I have read you need between 2.2 to 2.4 to make it worthwhile but not really able to see any local jobs from builders so wanted opinions on whether the height I have is worth it to gain a bedroom with ensuite and walk in wardrobe and maybe a study of some sort? I imagine the usable height would be around 2.1 to 2.2m?
 
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Soldato
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Realised I never finished this thread. Well the build finished in like September, and we're really happy with the layout and usable space that the 2 bedroom and 1 bathroom layout has given us. And the obvious value benefit of an extra bedroom.

Still some soft furnishings and shelves etc to finish but otherwise we're all done!

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That's a great loft. The bathroom is awesome. Where did you draw your inspiration from?

Where is the elephant artwork from? That's a great size and livens up the area.

Cheers.
 
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@Russinating - Awesome job, looks amazing and you’ve got a showpiece bathroom to top it all off! I guess there’s not much in the way of storage up there, but you’ve added two double bedrooms which is brilliant. What a difference from the initial plans!
 
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Thanks guys. This was the final plan FYI:

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@Lartyconshayo Yeah they're fairly standard? Everything was from Victorian Plumbing.

@ddoubleep We viewed 4 extensions on our road and did something very similar to one of our neighbours in terms of layout and the panoramic window at the back. The views across Bristol are amazing and it's quite freeing to be showering whilst looking out!

Otherwise just life and stays in hotels etc I guess! We were set on a freestanding copper bath from the start and the green metro tiles shortly followed. We're really pleased with the bathroom, particularly the layout as we had some alternative ones to get a bath and a shower in.

The elephant is an original painting by an artist called Sophie Long. It was painted about 6 years ago live at Upfest in Bristol which is Europe's largest street art festival and we offered to buy it after. I think it's 1.2m x 1.2m on solid wood so yeah, it needs a good space!

@tom_nieto There's plenty for us at the moment. We're actually only two people but it's now a 5 bed, the 2 existing bedrooms have built-in wardrobes and the other is now a study. There's loads in the eaves but even just having 2 more beds with storage under is quite a lot! In the future we may get more chests of drawers, and the alcove bit in the blue room is going to have built-in shelving.

@a1ex2001 It's on the to-do list! That or paint them white, we're still undecided.
 
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Looks very nice! How come you went for it so soon if there's only 2 of you?

What was the overall cost roughly? Looks like a really well polished loft conversion. I presume there was already good ceiling height?
 
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Looks very nice! How come you went for it so soon if there's only 2 of you?

What was the overall cost roughly? Looks like a really well polished loft conversion. I presume there was already good ceiling height?

Few reasons, but mainly why not. Next being we want to redo the existing family bathroom and that'll be a lot less disruptive having a second already.

Cost was about £50k excluding fixtures and fittings but including a few unforeseens like re-felting another roof and repointing the chimney stack. And yeah loft ceiling height was 2.8m I think.
 
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Few reasons, but mainly why not. Next being we want to redo the existing family bathroom and that'll be a lot less disruptive having a second already.

Cost was about £50k excluding fixtures and fittings but including a few unforeseens like re-felting another roof and repointing the chimney stack. And yeah loft ceiling height was 2.8m I think.


50k seems very good value for that to be honest! Presume thats 2.8m to the apex? What type of roof you go for? Rubber or GRP?
 
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50k seems very good value for that to be honest! Presume thats 2.8m to the apex? What type of roof you go for? Rubber or GRP?

Just double checked and it was £54,978 in total excluding bathroom fixtures, rads, carpets and decorating.

They were a good £20k less than some other quotes we had, they had good reviews (we spoke to prior customers) and specialise in lofts so were quite no fuss about everything which saves everyone time and therefore money. Few niggles with some of their contractors but nothing that wasn't rectified promptly.

And not sure about the roof tbh! GRP rings a bell though.
 
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Just double checked and it was £54,978 in total excluding bathroom fixtures, rads, carpets and decorating.

They were a good £20k less than some other quotes we had, they had good reviews (we spoke to prior customers) and specialise in lofts

We've been quoted double this (in London though) which I felt was pretty expensive. Given the scale of the work involved, we've had people suggest that we use general builders (with loft experience) rather than a pure loft firm. What we're your experiences like with a loft specialist?
 
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wow that looks superb! which colours did you use on that first bedroom?

Colours are Farrow & Ball's Red Earth, Setting Plaster and School House White but mixed at Johnstone's.

We've been quoted double this (in London though) which I felt was pretty expensive. Given the scale of the work involved, we've had people suggest that we use general builders (with loft experience) rather than a pure loft firm. What we're your experiences like with a loft specialist?

Very good. Was very hands off, didn't need much project management, because it's very cookie-cutter for them bar where the stud walls go. They'd already done 2 on our road and loads in our area, so much so the owner didn't even look in the loft when he first came over. That time-saving is where they can keep their costs competitive. We did a side return extension at our last house which needed far more PM even though they were a bigger firm so I've got some comparison.
 
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