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Demolition


Triassic

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Having promised my wife Debbie that I’d get people in to do most of the Work associated with the new house, i contacted two local demolition companies and got prices to demolish the old timber bungalow. The prices were £6,000 and £12,200. Being tight I demolished it myself, it cost the price of three skips, £540, The bonus for me was over £1,000 in payment for the scrap from the house, things like a hot water copper cylinder and piping, lead off the roof, the old cast iron AGA and two baths, the oil fired boiler, taps, light and socket fittings etc.

 

The problem in demolishing a timber frame house is the amount of timber! So I saved as much of the timber as possible and cut up the rest into firewood sized pieces, I used leftover builders bags to store it and we’re burning it very slowly in the cabin, the problem is the cabin is so well insulated we only managed to burn half a builders bags worth last year!. An even biggest problem was the cedar shingle roof, it had been re-covered during its life so the shingles were two layers thick. I ended up cutting the roof up using a reciprocating saw, a lot less dangerous than a chain saw! The roof as then burnt on site, 

 

The roof being stripped.

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It’s going slowly!

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Progress.

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Finally clearing up the plot.

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All told it took me six months to dismantle the old bungalow and clear the site. luckly my time is free and I did save £6k and taking the scrap value into account I’m £7,000 in pocket to spend elsewhere.

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Well done, I know what it's like having dismantled our timber bungalow. We've been lucky and given most of the timber away on Freecycle/Freegle and the rest we've taken to the tip. We had to pay to have the asbestos removed but we're still within our budget for demolition. It's taken three months to take it down and dispose of everything but it's satisfying to do it for nothing and everything takes us an age.

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I tried to give it away and I only had one guy turn up and he only wanted new wood! I even tried advertising it as firewood as we live in a rural area and a lot of people have woood burning stoves, again I only had one person come and look and he only wanted logs!

 

I did manage to sell a lot of the internal fixtures and fittings. I reused some of the timber to make a site loo, it’s a lot nicer than a plastic Tardis Loo and it doesn’t blow over in high wind!!

Edited by Triassic
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Although  we didn't have a demolition to do, I've managed so far to burn everything burnable left over from the build, utilise everything masonary based to fill in holes and recycle all the metals. So quite amazingly I've not paid for one single skip thus far! I was certain I'd need to, but by waiting for nights when the wind direction meant I didn't inconvenience anyone with smoke. Some bits and bobs have gone in with domestic waste and the recycling bin, though I'm careful not to overdo it at any one time.  I may have to work something out when I get to plasterboarding out however. 

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