Soldato
I am every the optimist
Not to mention the grass going on the gravelYou've obviously not had gravel before .
This is 1960s cross wall construction. The spine walls between houses are brick, then the facing walls are timber cross beams. Although in my case it seems there's not a lot of timber in it!LB
Looking at your Flat it reminds me of my first job after leaving school which was electricians mate.
We had to put conduit up walls to each floor and when we were there it was just concrete pillars with concrete floor on each level - is yours built the same because nothing on each floor was load bearing.
guarantee after about a month you will get fed up of the tool you always want being in the bottom box and having to unstack them all to get it know the feeling got the same and even though i have a garage they live in the corner of the dining roomGot to put in abouce 500 quid of loft boards and insulation (went for OSB as it was only slightly more than chipboard). 20 degrees so not a great time to start!
Loftzone system being put in plus im fitting some timbers as a handrail around the hatch
Any ideas for cleaning up the gap between the hatch and the loft insulation im all ears.??
Also for all interested, I bought a Dewalt tstak offer from screwfix, 20 quid a box... Possibly a bit OTT for DIY but I don't have a garage so trying to work out how to store all my tools neatly..
Interesting, this is a job I need to do this year (also a bungalow) what now killer do you use?It's coming up to spray the roof tiles time- to kill the moss -Didn't do it last year.
I use a Hozelock 5ltr sprayer but main problem now is I am to old to walk the ridge tiles so it's done from a pair of steps (Bungalow) and only trouble is it won't reach last three foot to ridge so bought a extending lance - My sprayer is so old the threads don't match.
As luck would have it Toolstation are selling a 5lt Fence panel sprayer for £19 and new lance will fit that so got one - only problem here is it won't seal so a few twists of PTFE tape and I am ready to go.
Doing this over the years has kept the concrete tiles clear of moss.
LB
Looking at your Flat it reminds me of my first job after leaving school which was electricians mate.
We had to put conduit up walls to each floor and when we were there it was just concrete pillars with concrete floor on each level - is yours built the same because nothing on each floor was load bearing.
I use roof moss killer -I think it is better than stuff you put on slabs -I had 5ltrs for about £40 - Got half left after a good few years.Interesting, this is a job I need to do this year (also a bungalow) what now killer do you use?
We appointed a Level 3 RICS survey ourselves from a pretty large firm! Which was obviously full of "We suspect but can't be sure, best get further investigation done" arse covering boiler plate. Nothing came across as a red flag to me i.e. they didn't say "This is concerning, don't buy it". Just "This could mean an issue, we can't say it's not, so get someone to look at it".@LuckyBenski that house looks like a nightmare.
Have I missed something? Was it a cash purchase? That’s seriously something that so fundamental. Was there a survey?
We appointed a Level 3 RICS survey ourselves from a pretty large firm! Which was obviously full of "We suspect but can't be sure, best get further investigation done" arse covering boiler plate. Nothing came across as a red flag to me i.e. they didn't say "This is concerning, don't buy it". Just "This could mean an issue, we can't say it's not, so get someone to look at it".
Maybe we misinterpreted the tone of the survey then, and our solicitors almost certainly didn't read the thing to feed back.
Not a cash purchase, first time buy (chunky deposit though, about 40%). Mortgaged with a high street bank, pretty normal setup. Good thing I'm acheapskatefrugal person and will be able to budget for any work needed. Aside from this issue, the house is in surprisingly good nick - decorated well enough to live in til we change it, new (flat) roof in 2020, paperwork for boiler and radiators replaced <10 years ago.
Yeh, the textured effect is a pain, can't really be bothered to mess around matching that. Not in a garage anyway It looks 100% better than the gaping hole though.Textured ceilings are a pain when it comes to repairs. Our previous owners did some small repairs in the office and did a crap job blending the texture in. Luckily not really a problem in a garage!
Yeah, need to do something about that tooLooks good. I like the green accents on the pipe work