Hi all. My wife and I bought our first house last year in Brighton and are in the process of showing it some much needed love. We bought it from a 95 year old lady who apparently lived here her whole life. Around 5 years ago she had a builder "fix" the place up, which involved dot-and-dabbing plasterboard everywhere, a bit of paint and a general avoidance of all the issues affecting the house. We're undoing all of that and making some changes as we go, trying to respect the house for what it is whilst trying to bring it up to date and hopefully future-proof it somewhat. A lot of this is new to me so we're relying heavily on research, books and forums (hence this introduction). We're doing it all ourselves and saving the money for the engineer and occasional consultancy from a local architect. Thus far we've inserted a beam and post downstairs to knock the ground floor into one space, and another post and beams upstairs to support the chimneys in the loft so that we can remove them below. (one down, one to go). Floors and joist have been removed downstairs too due to rot and worm and a lack of airflow. This has shown that we have very very shallow footings (we'll need to underpin on 2 sides to create depth for proper airflow). On the plus side we're on chalk, the house is made of brick not bungeroosh (for those of you familiar with Brighton building), and there are a ton of pubs in the area (all currently closed sadly). Also on the cards are a side infill extension at the rear (to expand the kitchen) and a loft conversion, all performed (hopefully) along the lines of an EnerPHit refurb. It's a lot to chew on, but we've got time and patience (and no kids to inflict this on luckily). And we're living on site too. Looking forward to the day we can buy ballast again!
Cheers, Mike