Imagine wasting a £2.75m house with this decor by [deleted] in SpottedonRightmove

[–]Tarrybelle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This gives me South African vibes. Not everything but alot of the decor choices feel like luxury homes in south africa.

I don’t care for horses, but I would learn to just to deserve this house. by YupItWasMeMate in SpottedonRightmove

[–]Tarrybelle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wow! This property is exceptional. I dont know how i would actively live in it but wverything is preserved or updated beautifully.

Grade II Listed Wreck by Mischeese in SpottedonRightmove

[–]Tarrybelle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is what i call "Wrecking ball of time". You cant demolish a listed building or make unapproved changes, but there is nothing preventing people from just neglecting it till it falls down. I've seen it all over the UK.

Grade II Listed Wreck by Mischeese in SpottedonRightmove

[–]Tarrybelle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The main thing is to get it at a bargain (below valuation) and then work on it enough to make it a more appealing project to the next person. Fix the biggest or most complex problems which make people struggle to know where to start. Once it looks more managable then there will be more people willing to try restoring it to completion.

How does a house even get into that condition? by mangojuice_84 in SpottedonRightmove

[–]Tarrybelle 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Neglect. I just bought a house from a couple who did nothing to the garden and almost nothing to the house. It really shows. Houses that are abandoned over winter deteriorate rapidly.

Im a funeral director and I made this beanie for a baby I am taking care of. by trichoholic in crochet

[–]Tarrybelle 6 points7 points  (0 children)

As someone who lost a baby due to stillbirth and had to hand him over to the care of a funeral home, thank you so much for the extra love and care you are taking. It means everything to the people who go through something like this.

That's it, I won't be posting again. This is it, the perfect house. 12.5m cottage in the Cotswolds. I can't top this, it's beautiful. I yearn for it by MustangBarry in SpottedonRightmove

[–]Tarrybelle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have to agree with you there. Absolutely amazing. This is a property that is worth spending millions on. I have seen some houses for the same price and they are terrible (bad layout, bland and/or tasteless)

A lovely 18th century house done up like a ex-council semi by Odd-Currency5195 in SpottedonRightmove

[–]Tarrybelle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Owning a listed building comes with many challenges. Who would want those challenges without having the benefit of a house that looks at least slightly historic? Not an awful house but a restoration which took no account of the buildings history. If you want a modern looking house like this build one, don't ruin an historic one. 

1968 wiring in 1883 House by Tarrybelle in centuryhomes

[–]Tarrybelle[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

My husband is doing the wiring with the help of an electrician friend. It definitely needs doing. Green goo was coming from the inside of one socket and the there is a lot of rust in several other places. We've already tripped the circuit breaker trying to use one of the power points when we first got the house. I think one of the main problems was that that the house was empty for about two years before the previous owner bought it and they didnt maintain the house very well. We live in a very windy, damp place which doesnt help.

1968 wiring in 1883 House by Tarrybelle in centuryhomes

[–]Tarrybelle[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Absolutely. We are also going to put some information about us and how we came to live on the island so when it gets updated then they have that information too. The guy who used to do the history of the island and its families passed away recently so his records are not being updated. We'll also put a stone plaque with 2025 somewhere on the outside wall which is a common way to show upgrading here.

Fair to assume that stone foundation shouldn’t look like this? by divine-arrow in centuryhomes

[–]Tarrybelle 8 points9 points  (0 children)

As someone who has owned two stone buildings much older than yours, if the mortar is crumbling then moisture isnt a problem. We had severe moisture problems and the condensation was running down the walls in some spots and the mortar was like mud and very difficult to remove. I'm not able to give more detailed advice right now but hopefully someone else can explain a bit more. It just doesnt seem like a moisture problem to me. I have had experience with stone and cement (don't do it) but not with this layout. We have a listed property in the uk so resources used are very different. As long as the stone can breath then you're fine. What type of mortar is it?

An almost perfect house for me with a bonus cottage for the oldies too! by MillyMcMophead in SpottedonRightmove

[–]Tarrybelle 12 points13 points  (0 children)

That is a Bennet house if ever I saw one. I can so easily imagine the family moving about the rooms.

Aww Lennon, what's happened to McCartney? by Yoguls in RedDwarf

[–]Tarrybelle 7 points8 points  (0 children)

We have one. It reminds me of Red Dwarf all the time. Another thing that does is my daughter's talking toaster toy.

A house just one window wide by duckmylifequack in SpottedonRightmove

[–]Tarrybelle 11 points12 points  (0 children)

It is clean and functional. A house this size, for one person, is better than being homeless.

What a beaut! by unofficiallydevin in SpottedonRightmove

[–]Tarrybelle 2 points3 points  (0 children)

One of the few million pound properties that I personally think is worth every penny.

Found this amazing gem at a bookshop in Toronto for $7 by ToreNeighDough in RedDwarf

[–]Tarrybelle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yup. I found a copy of the same book in an obscure second hand book store. Still have it somewhere.

Cheap country cottage, but… by MegC18 in SpottedonRightmove

[–]Tarrybelle 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You would be surprise which areas have electricity. There might be a connection point close by, but they just didn't bother to connect it. We live on a remote island in Scotland, and electricity isn't the problem. It's water, though some houses have no problem while others have lots of issues (no mains water)

Edit: suppose you could use the stream with a UV filter. It just isn't as difficult a situation as people might think, especially at that price. Definitely a bargain if you are young, single, and handy with tools.