I own a sixties dormer bungalow in a small village near Milton Keynes.
It looks like this:

As you can see, its kind of ugly from the outside! But its much better inside, and in a good location, in a pretty little village not far from the motorway.
When I first looked at the house in 2002 I saw that it had potential. I knew that we needed to do the house up in two phases. We immediately had to do a lot of work to make the house habitable.
This included:
- new central heating
- new windows
- new fascias, soffits, barge-boards and gutters
- new kitchen
- new bathroom
- new carpets
- complete redecoration
- a radical garden overhaul
However, this was just the immediate works. I always knew if we stayed here we needed to address much more fundamental problems with the house.
Its on a fairly big corner plot of 0.21 acres, but unusually oriented as it faces a small private close and has a garden to the left and right of the house rather than front and back. It faces a (nearly) identical house over the close:

There is a large south facing garden to the left of the house which is currently ‘disconnected’ by being accessed around the ugly double garage:

You’ll also note that there are lots of windows on the north face of the house and none on the south. This is due to it being a mirror image of the original design which was rotated in order to (cheaply) meet the 1960s planning condition of the garage being further up the private close from the road than the house.
In 2007 we secured planning permission for a large extension on the south of the house (extending on the same profile to add over 1/3 the volume of the existing house and adding the much needed south facing windows) plus demolishing the existing attached garage in favour of a detached double garage sited at the end of the garden.
However, we never felt that the design was brave enough, or really solved the minor niggles we had with the existing house. For example, the dormer windows always seemed particularly ugly and appeared to get minor leaks in really wet weather. We also disliked the concrete ‘skirt’ that made the path around the house, the wood cladding in the kitchen, the tiny fireplace in the lounge and the back garden was pretty much a blank canvas we didn't use. We got a few quotes, but never clicked with any of the builders or felt inspired enough to start work.
However, we recently decided after two years of looking online at houses that came up for sale in the area that nothing seemed more appealing than fixing what we have already got. We also began to get to know more people in the village than our immediate neighbours and felt more settled here. To add to that we have recently doubled the size of our family with the arrival of our twin daughters prematurely in May.
So, I contacted a couple more builders to speak about our plans for the house, to see whether it was possible to realise my fantasy that there must be a way to make the house work effectively and also to get rid of the 1960s first impression. As with our experience in 2007 most of the people we spoke to were either pretentious and hugely expensive, or desperately pushy. None seemed to have any enthusiasm about the project or a vision of the small tweaks it would take to the design to make the house really work. Thankfully a neighbour put us in touch with Jeff Clarkson of Admiral Home Improvements (who do driveways, patios, fences and conservatories) and he put us in touch with John and Neil at Fusion Design and Build.
From the first meeting it was apparant that John and Neil had that rare combination of being genuinely pleasant people, and a high level of professional expertise coupled with meticulous standards. I contacted two of their recent customers and had never heard references like it - they were praised for being considerate, keeping the site tidy, for keeping in budget and on schedule, for honesty, and roundly for the quality of their work. Amazingly their quote was also cheaper than any of the others!
They helped us reach a decision to replace the flat roof dormers with pitched gables, and velux rooflights, and to do the other small remodelling tasks. Their quote even included relocating our garden pond and making it child-safe! We agreed a contract of works and within 3 weeks they started work, promising the work would be completed by Christmas.
This blog is a way to share the work that is going on with our friends and family, and also a record of our experience of them as builders that Fusion Design and Build might wish to share with future customers.