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The Selfbuilder Magazine

The Selfbuilder is the essential magazine for self-builders, renovators and home improvers brought to you by the multi-award winning team behind Grand Designs Live and Grand Designs Magazine. Request your FREE copy now.


GRAND Designs Magazine

Grand Designs Magazine is the perfect complement to its namesake Channel 4 TV show. The show’s host, Kevin McCloud, takes you to some of his favorite buildings, and every issue features innovative, sustainable (and occasionally wacky) architecture from around the world. We spot the latest trends in design and identify the hottest designers to look out for, plus there are tons of practical ideas and advice for the home. Whether you’re embarking on your very own grand design or simply doing up the living room, you’ll be inspired.


GRAND Designs Live

Grand Designs Live is the UK’s no. 1 consumer show for anyone who has an interest in design, build, interiors , shopping, home wares, gardens, kitchens & bathrooms, and innovation. With yearly exhibitions taking place in London and Birmingham, you can source ideas and inspiration from every house we have ever featured on the TV show; view the widest range of kitchens and bathrooms in the UK, enjoy the chance to try your hand at self-build techniques, and indulge in more opportunities to source products than ever before.


GRAND Designs CD-ROM Archive

Search for everything you need at a touch of a button, a fantastic search facility. Each magazine replicated to view on your own computer.

 


GRAND Designs TV series on DVD 1, 2, 3 and 4

DVD Series 1

Features all eight episodes from the television series which shows people building their own properties from scratch or carrying out grand makeovers.

 


DVD Series 2

More episodes from the fascinating design and build series, detailing innovative projects from around the UK.

 


DVD Series 3

In third series, Kevin McCloud follows six couples in pursuit of their dream home. Whether it’s creating a post-modern cube from scratch in Cambridgeshire or building a house underground in the Cumbrian earth, Kevin is on hand to pore over the plans and lend support.

 


DVD Series 4

In this fourth series, Kevin McCloud tells the stories of seven new ambitious design projects and the people who build them. Amongst the blue-prints he meets a couple who set up their own architectural practice to realise their goal and meets a music manager who wants to build a Modernist Bauhaus inspired with white cube in the middle of a sleepy English seaside town.

 


GRAND Designs TV House Special

40 Amazing projects from the hit TV show. The price includes postage and packaging. A special edition bringing you the very best of TV houses seen on screen. It's inspiring photography creates a very beautiful and collectable publication.

 

 
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Current Issue
 

The story so far

Who? Scott and Kate Voorhees and family

What? A Thirties Grade II-listed Modern Movement house in Hampstead, London, designed by Ernst Freud.

How long? Two years.

High point? ‘Getting the listed building consent. We’d thought it was going to be more complicated, so we were delighted’.

Low point? ‘A badly-built wall in the garden had to be shored up with concrete, pushing the project back two months’.


Energy efficiency

  • Bringing listed buildings up to current standards of energy efficiency can be almost impossible, many were built before such things were a concern. Historic building surveyor Phil Ogley of Oxley Conservation recommends finding out more about how your building functions. ‘Check the thickneses and make-up of your walls, and an air pressure test can reveal the origin of drafts,’ he says. And here are some more listed building-friendly tips.

  • Old buildings need to breathe, don’t seal them completely. But ensure there is adequate ventilation in rooms like the kitchen and bathroom.

  • You’re unlikely to be allowed double-glazing, but secondary glazing could be permitted. Clear View produce wood-framed opening secondary windows specially tailored for listed buildings which are miles from the plastic horrors commonly available (www.clearviewsg.co.uk).

  • Old-fashioned draft excluders are a great choice – they are effective and easily removable, but they’re also cheap.

  • Insulate as much as you can. Use breathable products, like wood fibreboard, sheep’s wool, mineral wool and insulation made from cotton, hemp or recycled newspaper. Avoid foil-backed insulation, sprays and foams.

  • Insulating single skin walls can be problematic, and you can lose the benefit of the thermal mass of the wall in the process.

  • An efficient boiler and good thermostat control can make a big difference, but if you’re using original radiators these will reduce the system’s effectiveness.

  • Unused chimneys can be partially sealed either by a chimney sweep or using a readily available DIY balloon method, where the balloon inflates inside the chimney, partially blocking it and therefore minimising heat loss.

Bricking it

‘When we said that we wanted to clean the exterior, to bring it back to what it would have originally looked like, the conservation officer wasn’t keen,’ says Scott. The couple’s architect Alice Brown says that conservationists often wish to show the age of the brick, but on this occasion both she and her client felt that it would be more apposite to show the building as it would have looked when it was built.

‘We never wanted to blast it into shininess, but rather to bring the building out,’ says Scott. They had it ‘conservation cleaned’, that is, with a weak acid solution – and they are pleased with the result. ‘You can see that the

bricks are a very important part of the building,’ says Alice. Unlike some Modern Movement houses that use whitewashed render – a look that doesn’t always work with the British weather – Freud’s brickwork gives the house a sense of context in London.

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