SteamyTea Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago I have seen the title term used, as well as similar terms like 'high end'. To me they just seem like marketing puff, and have no real meaning. If I was building a good house, it would have thicker walls, floor joists, stairs that bear onto a concrete floor. Basically things that give a very solid structure. What I would not consider is anything that is easily replaced, bathrooms, kitchens, doors and windows, which are nice to have, but do not really add real value in my eyes. A decent heating and ventilation system is important these days, but assuming the basic design is right, the replaceable heat source or MVHR unit is a bit of irrelevant as it can be changed. What do others think constitutes 'quality'?
Big Jimbo Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago High end, quality, means that i have sprinkled my magic wand over it. 1
SimonD Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 20 minutes ago, SteamyTea said: I have seen the title term used, as well as similar terms like 'high end'. To me they just seem like marketing puff, and have no real meaning. If I was building a good house, it would have thicker walls, floor joists, stairs that bear onto a concrete floor. Basically things that give a very solid structure. What I would not consider is anything that is easily replaced, bathrooms, kitchens, doors and windows, which are nice to have, but do not really add real value in my eyes. A decent heating and ventilation system is important these days, but assuming the basic design is right, the replaceable heat source or MVHR unit is a bit of irrelevant as it can be changed. What do others think constitutes 'quality'? I think you've just described properties in the opposite of the order most people put them in. Most people will think less about spending huge amounts of money on kitchens and bathrooms, but will then skimp on a heating system, unless it's a flashy column radiator.. 2
-rick- Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 1 minute ago, SimonD said: I think you've just described properties in the opposite of the order most people put them in. Most people will think less about spending huge amounts of money on kitchens and bathrooms, but will then skimp on a heating system, unless it's a flashy column radiator.. Agree, not how I look at it but I think most people think about touch points, so expensive fixtures and fittings that feel luxury (eg solid metal rather than plastic and name brand 'premium' appliances, etc.
SteamyTea Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago Bit of a tricky one. At work, I often hear the therm 'I don't get paid enough to do this'. I pointed out the other day that if they were working at their peak performance, extra money could not make a difference. I feel the same about expensive items, which to me are generally add ons, not fundamentals. An example of this is car tyres. I can get a Goodyear for £170, or the ones I have, for £60. There may be a difference at the very extreme of performance, but as the ABS and stability control both work, I won't see the difference. I feel the same about a bathtub, or a kitchen work surface (I use a chopping board anyway). Maybe @Nickfromwales can join in as he often mentions the high spec places he works on.
Big Jimbo Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago always try and fit, unbranded items. That way you can say they are handmade. One off, and seriously expensive. I think it was that Northern monkey @nod who said that all the people who viewed his house only ever asked about the boiling water tap.
Big Jimbo Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago I did some work in a place that was 120Million. It had some sort of very fancy Airstream door, that prevented any smell from the swimming pool, entering the rest of the property.
Big Jimbo Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago I built a vanity unit for an en-suite that was £12k. I'd call that high end. It was made of Wenge, marble, included lights, and a shaver socket. Another had a feature glass panel between Two rooms, that cost £120k. Obviously my vanity unit looked fab, but the glass wall thing looked tacky. Russian Mafia money.
Crofter Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 52 minutes ago, Big Jimbo said: I built a vanity unit for an en-suite that was £12k. I'd call that high end. It was made of Wenge, marble, included lights, and a shaver socket. Another had a feature glass panel between Two rooms, that cost £120k. Obviously my vanity unit looked fab, but the glass wall thing looked tacky. Russian Mafia money. Wow. My entire bathroom cost £700.
SteamyTea Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago 1 minute ago, Crofter said: Wow. My entire bathroom cost £700. That is a proper price. Gets the dirt off just the same as a £10k one.
Big Jimbo Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago I totally agree. Its just people with limitless money, want things that nobody else have. Stupid Mansory Rolls Royce for £800k
Crofter Posted 59 minutes ago Posted 59 minutes ago 1 hour ago, SteamyTea said: That is a proper price. Gets the dirt off just the same as a £10k one. I don't feel like I've cut any corners. There's genuinely nothing I would do differently even if I had a bigger budget. (Actually there is- I'm never tiling an entire room in metro tiles again!)
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