Renovating beach house: Grade of windows and doors
last month
Featured Answer
Sort by:Oldest
Comments (8)
- last month
- last month
Related Discussions
Would love some help with my living room - small beach house
Comments (7)I recently decorated our beach condo on a budget. Items to consider are bowls or clear glass vases with found shells displayed. Sisal rug and woven baskets make a coastal feel. The baskets are great for storage as well. I used white light and linen drapes found at ikea.Because of small size of room, i have glass tables to help maximze space. I am adding shutters found at a flea market as headboard for guest bedroom this year. I found many useful items from community sales. I frequent local beach decor shops some pricey to get ideas for arranging and adding items. I would put couch so can look out window to garden. Put it floating in the center of the room, Tv on wall. Two chairs sort of where they are now in photo. Small table and chairs located near door and kitchen. Looks like not much space there but look at ikea furniture as it is for small spaces. One ikea table is shown to be against wall and then pulls out to enlarge, it might work for you....See MoreHow can we make our small open plan 2 bedroom beach house bigger?
Comments (27)Hi arcmaz Great house - fantastic 60's modern look - Harry Sidler (Modernist Architect 1923-2006 exponent of the Bauhaus style in Australia, mainly Sydney) would have loved the interpretation, its a good style, don't change it will pay dividends in the long run. It would be good if there was a plan of the house,and a plan of the block this would allow some relatively accurate planning proposals. If you had the real-state plan with the block plan it would help a lot. In terms of making the place bigger and retaining the style I would suggest that the extension (maybe one room and an en suite depending on a budget) be a block in the today's current style, but linked to the existing house via a "link" (Link =small walkway). This would allow you to retain the style, but not be dominated by a past period, I have done this a few times and it has worked fairly well. If you are looking for three bedrooms it might be best to add a master bedroom with a bathroom, and then maybe living areas with back yard access. There may be other approaches depending on the current layout that could be considered, but I would retain as much as the original as possible, and only make small cosmetic changes until you are ready for a worthy development. I hope this is of some help, I would be happy to comment further or work on this project. Regards - Michael Manias Manias Associates Building designers - mm407p@gmail.com...See MoreFull house renovation advice
Comments (18)Hi Kel. Whilst I agree with the above, a few of your items in the list would not require a builder and you would be paying extra simply because someone else is insuring and supervising the installation for you eg flooring can be done direct with a flooring company at the end. Re build vs demolish, if you buy in Mullaloo there is a retained value in the existing house that you would be throwing away by demolishing ie to replace the existing house back to existing size (although your own configuration) using up part of your budget vs applying that to just modifying the existing home. The major costs in renovations in Perth (being double brick/concrete slab) are the relocation of services such as plumbing / wastes etc that typically are required when eg a bathroom is reconfigured or kitchen relocated and the finishes of those rooms eg cabinetry, benchtops, tiles etc. They will be a large amount but again are also part of the cost of a new build. For mine, renovating is giving new life to a tired home and is nearly always enthusiastically accepted by Councils and neighbours when planning. Changing a facade to a house in Mullaloo is generally quite straight forward but keep in mind existing houses there usually have quite low eaves/roof lines. It depends on the house as to the options eg additional roof structure to raise visual height / modifications / garage location etc. Re the costs, it will completely depend on the house, what style and level of finish you want it to be when finished (we've had people spend $2,400 on a shower mixer), the extent of the changes and how much time you have to arrange things eg flooring. Good luck!...See MoreRenovating a 1970's blonde brick house
Comments (9)There's a lot to take in . It is pretty quirky , but it has potential to be interesting . I'd leave the brickwork as it is , and the windows are windows -- you say they need replacing soon -- they seem okay to me . I'd quite like darker brown timber windows , but I don't know of many people that have 'reverted' back to timber -- I assume it can be done ? The back door is easy -- its screaming out for a deck in a darker wood ( or darker stained ) , but even then you could have fun , with seating built around part of it , or even a barbeque or similar built unit on the edge -- in a similar light brick , or stone . Personally , I wouldn't do a pergoda or similar over it , mainly because of the studio -- it takes away too much sun and too much open space . Likewise , a modern terrace with glass sides would look out of place . The entry door IMO is not too bad -- it works . The concrete steps let it down -- black or charcoal outdoor tiles would lift it , and look good . A stainless handrail would be the go too -- it'll look out of place until its 6 months old and starts to look 'aged' . The addition to the right needs darker mortar to make it look integrated . The roof looks okay and period in that green , so depending on how much can be reused , maybe stay with that . Or go charcoal , or even orange would suit . The shipboards in crisp white . That leaves just one thing needed -- some colour ! An orange roof with bright orange gutters would lift the whole place ; green with an almost fluro crisp green gutter colour likewise ; charcoal roof with bright red gutters ! Just enough to lift the look , even for people who don't like much colour ! I'd also do the main body of the gables in the same colour as you chose for the gutters , or maybe 1 or 2 shades down ....See More- last month
- last month
- last month
Paul Di Stefano Design