ᐅ Renovation of an Existing Property – Our Journey to a Home

Created on: 13 Jun 2019 14:38
L
LordNibbler
Since returning to Wolfsburg in 2017, we had been searching for a property. Initially, we rented to take our time finding the right house and to test the real estate agents.

  • detached single-family house (so no semi-detached houses)
  • within walking distance to the city centers of Wolfsburg, Fallersleben, or Vorsfelde
  • for existing buildings, construction year from 1960 onwards, even if not renovated, as long as the structure justifies investment (otherwise you pay for poor renovations that need to be redone)
  • for new builds, located in a residential area with a coherent design concept (many new developments unfortunately look like model home neighborhoods where every option from the catalog has been used, but without creating a harmonious living environment)
  • a larger garden with usable space
  • no leasehold (common in this area)

Of course, properties meeting these criteria were expensive and scarcely available. The first viewings were disappointing:
  • 5-year-old house in a new development: walls with cracks, water stains (from the foundation slab), unoccupied, agent said normal settlement cracks (but wrong direction and too large), suspected upward ground movement due to Posidonia shale underground according to the land use plan and construction errors
  • 8-year-old house in the same development: not legally divided plot (3 houses on 2 plots), agent claimed legal division (sent documents with condominium declaration), neighborhood dispute (not ideal in a condominium under self-management)
  • 1950s development house: severe moisture problems in the basement including mold, agent already had an offer for exterior waterproofing (franchise concept with suction lance) which was not expensive, basement height under 1.8m (5 feet 11 inches), so not usable
  • 1950s development house: sold after only 2 years (hidden defects?), superficial renovation (cosmetic upgrades but original substructure)
  • several other houses that left little impression (location, layout, quality, price not suitable)

Then, at the beginning of 2018, an offer came up that didn’t fully meet our criteria but was in the same neighborhood.
  • built mid-1958
  • very high-quality construction and workmanship for the time
  • architect-designed house (engineer) for a medical professional (MD)
  • hillside location, split-level, integrated garage
  • district heating with concealed convectors
  • well maintained, so renovation was minimal (bathroom tiled + ceramics, new roof 2002, new windows 1995)
  • well-kept garden, granite paving
  • 165m² (1,776 sq ft) living space + 40m² (430 sq ft) utility space
  • 905m² (9,740 sq ft) leasehold plot at a dead-end street
  • 493,000 €



Garden in front of modern house with glass facade, garden bench, potted plants and palms

Two-story house made of light bricks with brown garage door, balcony plants and wooden fences.


Bright interior with wooden paneling, stairway to living room level.


The house was actually larger than we needed, but the structure and architecture were excellent. Renovations were manageable (utility lines easily accessible, partly in shafts), and the leasehold was acceptable because the owners had prepaid their installments (there was a discount), so the annual fee was only 500€ (~$540). The leaseholder is the city of Wolfsburg, which by statute only raises interest rates upon resale (not during the lease term or inheritance). When purchasing the plot, the land value is calculated by the benchmark land value minus the redemption amount and with a 15% discount. In mid-2017, the offer for the land was therefore 118,000€ (~$128,000) (with today’s benchmark land value it would be about 150,000€ (~$162,000)). This was a bargain for the area and was included in the asking price according to the agent.

Still, after a second viewing with experts (not appraisers), we found enough arguments (wall crack, renovation needs) to negotiate the price down to 420,000€. The public offer was then reduced to 435,000€ (~$470,000).

A financing broker secured approval from the local savings bank (Sparkasse) for the mortgage (leasehold is a bit special here, mostly local banks are familiar). It was feasible as a 20-year full repayment loan (leasehold agreement had to be valid for at least another 10 years), with a potential buffer to save up the land price.

But there was one issue: the over-90-year-old occupant. She was looking for an apartment in a senior residence (ground floor, lake view). Every week we heard it was only a matter of days until one would become available. In the end, by mid-April, we had a reservation with ownership transfer no later than December, possibly sooner. So we committed to financing and arranged the notary appointment...

...and then a week later, there was a request for a meeting (bypassing the notary). The niece and sister explained that the reservation was declared invalid. The time pressure was too great. It wasn’t certain the apartment would be available yet. They felt the elderly woman couldn’t be expected to move into a care home. They wanted a purchase contract with more time — about a year (implicitly without a strict limit).

We only had 6 months interest-free financing extension, but could imagine a few more months. However, only with financial compensation (1,500€/month rental cost difference). The counterproposal was to buy as planned but with ownership transfer only after the occupant moves out (essentially the right to live there). This was not acceptable (due to hardship rules; in the end you own the house but cannot evict the old resident). The only outcome was an informal understanding: we remained interested, please inform us when the senior residence is arranged; if we find something else in the meantime we will get back to you. The agent (VR-Bank) was not very pleased since it had been difficult to get the three women to agree before. It wasn’t her fault; the dossier was the best prepared with all necessary documents and missing items obtained promptly.

Two weeks later there was another interested party. Moral of the story: we successfully lowered the price for others but they moved in in October 2017.

Here are some floor plans of the property as inspiration for other house planners:



Architectural section drawing of a house with roof construction, rooms and dimensions.


The agent mentioned that in the residential area, maybe one property sells every 1–2 years. The rest are sold privately. Since we moved in, three houses have been demolished and replaced by new builds twice the size. Another is still a shell and is receiving a huge extension. None of these properties were publicly marketed...

...the search continues in the next post and how we finally found our home.
Hand-drawn floor plan of a building with several rooms, doors, and dimensions.

Floor plan of a house: detailed layout with walls, doors, stairs, rooms and dimensions.
LordNibbler30 Jul 2020 21:15
I can just about reach with the window vacuum cleaner. For the outside, you can fix it rotated to 180° and also clean it from the inside.
LordNibbler16 Aug 2020 16:49
Moving on in the entrance area.
Installation removed from the wall:

Small bathroom with wall tiles, exposed plumbing fixtures and pipes


Tiles and aerated concrete partition wall removed:

Exposed water pipes and drainage pipes on a rough wall with construction dust.


Basement wall with peeling plaster, damp spots, and pipe in the corner.


Basement room with rough stone masonry, plastered walls and small window with grid mesh.


Floor tiles and screed chiseled out, sewage pipe broken up:

Basement room with rough stone wall, pipes on the left, hole in the floor and open door


Oh dear, left from 1996, center and right from 1960

Basement floor with two round holes in the concrete slab, rough wall and pipes
Winniefred16 Aug 2020 17:56
Yes, it does raise concerns about whether it will remain stable despite all the holes^^. We recently renovated a bathroom in a bungalow built around 1960, and it looked quite similar. Moving the toilet was impossible because of that (the room was probably even smaller and also had access to a pit in the floor). How big is your little room?

We are building as well, currently plastering one of the children's bedrooms.
LordNibbler16 Aug 2020 18:27
I want to close the middle hole in case I can route everything through the others. Wastewater pipe DN90, 5x 16mm (5/8 inch) pipes for water and heating, plus some electrical cables.

To add some stability, a metal mesh will be embedded in the screed.

The room is approximately 1.2 x 1.2 meters (4 x 4 feet) with a door that opens inward.
LordNibbler16 Aug 2020 19:51
Previously, we removed the tiles from the wall in the entrance area and tore out the old electrical wiring from the plaster in both rooms.

The tiled area has already been replastered. After chasing and laying the new cables, the wall can be replastered up to the ceiling.

Crumbled plaster on wall, exposed masonry, cables, door frame to tiling room.


Room under renovation with exposed masonry, open door frame on the left, white sheet on the right.


Small bathroom with peeling walls, tiles, open window with grate and light bulb.


Hallway area during renovation with exposed wall, wooden door on the left, entrance to bathroom on the right.


On the floor above, the partition wall to the knee wall has been removed.

Tight construction area: brick debris, concrete blocks, black pipe, bucket with rubble, structural walls.
LordNibbler17 Aug 2020 14:03
What is the proper, code-compliant way to route cables on sloped ceilings? Usually, cables are only allowed to be installed horizontally or vertically, with a defined distance from ceilings, floors, and corners. Center routing is typically permitted only in kitchens.

The original cables (blue) are installed accordingly. However, the previous previous owner added lights in the stairwell. The new cables run straight across at the same height as the light switch to lamp 1, then diagonally along the wall following the stairs down to lamp 2 (red), ending at the second switch.

Stairwell with illuminated wall lamp; red line marks path from stairs to door, blue marking on door frame.


What would be the correct routing from the junction box to the first lamp considering the sloped ceiling?