Our Seven Tips for the Perfect House Extension
Circumstances change. Whether you need more space for a baby, an office or a snooker table, you’ve realised your current home simply won’t be large enough for your future needs.
Circumstances change. Whether you need more space for a baby, an office or a snooker table, you’ve realised your current home simply won’t be large enough for your future needs.
These days, everywhere you look around, there seem to be signs up outside houses, that are having loft conversions.
Last week we took an initial look at the current popularity of loft conversions and how to make sure you get off to a good start.
In the last couple of weeks, we have looked briefly at the increasingly popular option of converting your loft.
In a remarkable year for the Catalonian independence movement – and don’t worry, we’re not about to get political – we thought now would be the perfect time to take a look at the work of the legendary architect Antoni Gaudí.
With the market for commercial office space depressed for a while now, developers are increasingly looking for opportunities to convert offices into apartments.
Adding a rear extension to your home presents an opportunity, not just to add valuable space to your interior living arrangements but to add visual impact too.
When you embark on a building project to extend your property, you want to plan the entire job to run as smoothly as possible in order to keep costs and disruption to a minimum.
Case study: 17th century thatched cottage in Cambridgeshire The old world architecture of rural England is one of the country’s unique charms but times and technology have changed since Charles II was on the throne and living in these quaint old properties
There are many good practical reasons for converting your loft.