I'm pretty clued up building related matters but mainly from my experience and help on here if my 1936 built, solid construction house that I've now sold! Some of you you who know me and so of the issues I've had will say... thank goodness for that! The property is now lovely but it's been a pain over the last 8 years!! The main issue has been not having a cavity constructed house and fighting the damp.
So... now I've sworn never to buy a house without a cavity again I'm looking at buying a 1970's house near Nottingham that a builder and wife have lived in for 10 years. I wanted some advice on the best things to do to make sure the house is in good working order and it's a good investment.
Firstly... surveys. What would you do? Some people say to get the most basic survey done and then have separate specialist look at other areas. Your thoughts? I was thinking of having... an electrician do a periodic test. A gas safe look at the pipe work. And a structural engineer do the rest. The reason I say this is because it's had three extensions (looks really nice and looks really well done) but I'd rather pay someone to qualify that. What do you think and what sort of prices would all this come to?
A bit about the property...
The owners (a builder) has done two of the extensions as on of the original ones was there already. The local council building control certified 2 of the 3 projects and an independent did the 3rd. I'm not sure which was which though so should I ask (now I've seen the property)?
They have fitted white PVC A rated windows throughout.
They have gone with aluminium bi fold doors on the back in the kitchen and lounge. The vendor said the kitchen ones cost £7k alone and they were much better than plastic ones.
The consumer units and boiler look modern.
They have fitted expensive German integrate appliances throughout.
Annoyingly that have built in (but probably easy to rip out) a set of cupboards in bedroom four making it too small to fit a single bed. I told the agent that due to this, it's technically not a 4 bedroom house as it has a window but can't fit a single bed.
The wallpaper in quite a few places is peeling. To be honest... I like fresh, clean emulsioned walls so wonder if the wall paper on a 70's house will come off easily or will it need a fresh skim after?
This doesn't interest me but throughout the house they have added speakers (in ceilings) tv in the bath and other gadgets such as electric garage door and electric front gates.
They have has central heating and additional underfloor heating in all tiled rooms.
What do you guys think? Help and advice would be really helpful.
Thanks.
So... now I've sworn never to buy a house without a cavity again I'm looking at buying a 1970's house near Nottingham that a builder and wife have lived in for 10 years. I wanted some advice on the best things to do to make sure the house is in good working order and it's a good investment.
Firstly... surveys. What would you do? Some people say to get the most basic survey done and then have separate specialist look at other areas. Your thoughts? I was thinking of having... an electrician do a periodic test. A gas safe look at the pipe work. And a structural engineer do the rest. The reason I say this is because it's had three extensions (looks really nice and looks really well done) but I'd rather pay someone to qualify that. What do you think and what sort of prices would all this come to?
A bit about the property...
The owners (a builder) has done two of the extensions as on of the original ones was there already. The local council building control certified 2 of the 3 projects and an independent did the 3rd. I'm not sure which was which though so should I ask (now I've seen the property)?
They have fitted white PVC A rated windows throughout.
They have gone with aluminium bi fold doors on the back in the kitchen and lounge. The vendor said the kitchen ones cost £7k alone and they were much better than plastic ones.
The consumer units and boiler look modern.
They have fitted expensive German integrate appliances throughout.
Annoyingly that have built in (but probably easy to rip out) a set of cupboards in bedroom four making it too small to fit a single bed. I told the agent that due to this, it's technically not a 4 bedroom house as it has a window but can't fit a single bed.
The wallpaper in quite a few places is peeling. To be honest... I like fresh, clean emulsioned walls so wonder if the wall paper on a 70's house will come off easily or will it need a fresh skim after?
This doesn't interest me but throughout the house they have added speakers (in ceilings) tv in the bath and other gadgets such as electric garage door and electric front gates.
They have has central heating and additional underfloor heating in all tiled rooms.
What do you guys think? Help and advice would be really helpful.
Thanks.