Our House

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Ranked #13,106 in DIY, #444,902 overall

How we built our house.

Myself and my wife embarked on the biggest DIY project of our life.

The result is shown in "Our House" that you can see on the left. You can see a larger photo here. Our beautiful home that looks a million dollars. But did it not cost us anywhere near that.

We gave our house a name. "Mothcote"

Well you will over time get snippets here on squidoo, but our full story is being written on our webstate at  "how-do-you-do"

We are not rich people most of the work was done by ourselves right from the initial design of the house. It took work but it was not completed in a rush. Most of the work was done while myself and my wife were working in full time jobs.

The large heritage hall next to "Our House" also belongs to us but that is another story. here we are going to talk about "Our House" which is also our home.

Follow our journey

Mirboo Mechanics Institute & Free Library. 

Where did it all start!

Marie had arranged a long weekend away after I had just finished a 6 month stint away on a project. We happened to come a cross a dilapidated community hall that was for sale. We fell in love with it and put in an offer that we did not expect to be accepted it was so low. To our surprise it was and we decided that we would restore the hall as it had historical connotations. It was going to be our first DIY project. It didn't turn out quite like that but we did get it to a position that it would not fall down. Furthermore it was in an ideal location situated close to a river. (No water problems we thought)

The image is of the official opening program. Opened in January 1929.

The poor hall went through a series of changes, finally abandoned by the community in 1986 when a new community hall was built. Not a patch on the architectal features of the hall which had a fully functional stage lovely edgings and a tasmanian maple dance floor. We set the stage up as accomodation for us as at this time we could only get down at weekends and holidays.

The hall roof looked like a donkey's hind leg so we had a local stumper come in and restumped the whole building with concrete stumps. We also had the main supports (redgum) cut off at the base and steel supports sunk into the ground that raised the stumps off the ground. This was against the recommendations of an architect that said that all the redgum supports (There were 12 of them) would have to be replaced. These supports held up the roof. After thinking about it we decided to talk to the stumper and suggested that he manufacture steel supports to fix to the bottom of the redgum supports after cutting off the rotten bits. So much for architects advice it cost a tenth as much and ended up being a more solid arrangement. ten years later and the building has not budged.

The next thing we did before deciding to build a house (So cold in the hall during winter) was to install a sewage system. We decided on a composting system. Because of the closeness of the river we were not allowed to put in a septic tank. This was passed as OK by the local authority and the Water & environment authority.

Next The start of "Our House"

Great Books On Home Improvement 

The Black & Decker Complete Photo Guide to Home Improvement: With 300 Projects and 2,000 Photos

Amazon Price: $29.88 (as of 11/15/2009) Buy Now

Inside the Not So Big House: Discovering the Details That Bring a Home to Life (Susanka)

Amazon Price: $23.07 (as of 11/15/2009) Buy Now

Bungalow Kitchens

Amazon Price: $26.37 (as of 11/15/2009) Buy Now

Home Improvement Tips. 

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by wstaton

Hello, My name is Wilf and my wife's name is Marie.

Marie is the architect of the artistic innovations. I am the practical architect.

I am a part...

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