ᐅ House Photos Discussion Corner – Share Your Home Pictures!

Created on: 25 Nov 2015 10:27
K
Koempy
Hello,

It would be really great if everyone here could just post one or a few pictures showing the current state of their house.

I'll start right away.

For renovations, it’s best to provide a comparison of before and after the remodeling.

Before March 2014:



After May 2015:

seat8825 Sep 2019 17:43
tomtom79 schrieb:

Have fun, and here’s a tip: take photos of everything and every wall, it really helps a lot later on.

That’s true, but afterward, you still realize you didn’t take enough...
opalau25 Sep 2019 17:49
After not sharing any photos for a while, here is some information about what has happened in the past few weeks.
  • Windows and front doors are installed
  • We spontaneously decided to insulate the attic and install two roof windows. This has given us over 100sqm (over 1,076 sq ft) of storage space
  • The electrician is happy about the composite wood panel because he doesn’t have to chase cables upward in the ground floor anymore


Modern grey front door with vertical glass panel in front of brick wall; scaffolding in front.


Unfinished interior with large glass sliding doors; outside is a construction site with soil piles and scaffolding.


Attic shell: insulation foil on roof slopes, central wooden support, building materials.


Unfinished interior of a construction project: concrete walls, supports, cables, building materials in the center.


Unfinished interior with cable ducts, rows of outlets, windows, and reels of cable.


Roof with grey, wavy tiles and a large roof window on the slope.
G
gmt94
25 Sep 2019 21:00
Now I’m speaking up again.

Unfortunately, like many others, my spruce trees didn’t survive the drought.

Several high-stemmed, bare trees next to a house; wire fence in the foreground, cloudy sky.


Fortunately, I have a helpful neighbor with a wheel loader, so we were able to transport all the logs without much trouble...

Red front loader lifting a wood stack in front of a white two-story house; man standing beside it.


In the end, it turned into a really nice mailbox post.

Large wood stack made of logs in front of a white single-family house with front garden.


The paving should have been done long ago. Unfortunately, my first exterior plasterer completely messed up the facade—both visually and technically. None of the window sills were properly sealed.

After much back and forth and almost 6,000 (USD) poorer, a master painter took care of the facade again.

The same person also botched the base sealing of the garage. During heavy rain, water leaked through the concrete block.

White interior wall above an unpaved ground with gravel and rubble – visible construction site floor.


I then painstakingly chipped off and cleaned all the leftover plaster outside and applied 2,000 ml (about 67.6 fl oz) of sealing slurry.

Now everything looks great, and my stones are ready for installation.

Several pallets of concrete roof tiles at the edge of a white house on cobblestone path.

Stack of concrete slabs on pallets next to a portable toilet, rows of trees in the background.


280 sqm (3,011 sq ft) of 40/20 and 20/20 stones
48 sqm (517 sq ft) of 60/40 terrace pavers and
110 m (361 ft) of lawn edging
Tina mit K26 Sep 2019 18:00
I have now affectionately nicknamed the house "Le Pappschachtél." We are still missing all the floor-to-ceiling windows (12 units), and the wooden walls don’t have any openings yet, so from the back, it really looks like a cardboard box.
Construction site with scaffolding: wooden house structure, roof framework visible, protective net at the edge.


Crane lifting a wooden component onto a construction with scaffolding; green meadow and houses in the background.


From the front, with the windows installed, it already looks more like a house.
Construction site of a new house: wooden frame, scaffolding, construction workers on the foundation.


The guys really gave it their all today and even put up the roof truss sooner than planned — they were actually supposed to do it tomorrow. I guess it might be so they can finish earlier on Friday. They definitely earned that. It’s clear these people have been working together for a long time, and my motto for today was: As long as the site manager is still smiling, everything is fine.

The cathedral ceiling in the living room already looks amazing, even without the windows, though of course that doesn’t come across in photos.
Construction setup: wooden walls, plastic sheeting, scaffolding poles, insulation rolls in an unfinished room.


Otherwise, we’ll probably both fall asleep on the couch since the alarm went off at 4:30 AM (4:30) to get the bread rolls ready and coffee brewing. Still, I was so cold that even a grandmother from the apartment building across the street noticed. I was pacing around trying to warm my legs when she showed up with a wicker basket filled with coffee and cookies and said, “It looks like the little snail is cold. Hopefully, this helps. You can leave the basket and dishes here or there.” XD
Climbee27 Sep 2019 06:54
Tina, that sounds like a great neighborhood! How lovely
Tina mit K27 Sep 2019 07:45
We are doing our best with the neighbors. It’s really a small village, and I think if you mess up somehow, it can become a serious problem. Everyone was a bit surprised when we went around to introduce ourselves and invite them to the topping-out ceremony. Judging by their reactions, I believe the two families who built houses before us didn’t do that.

My partner was even handed a gasoline chainsaw by another neighbor without being asked because we were having trouble with ours. I think we’re on a pretty good path. And, of course, always greet everyone politely and kindly.