Excluding the basement or semi basement.
1960 semi detached house roof construction.
The sixties semi was ultra modern on the outside as well as the inside.
Houses of the 50s and 60s were very different from what had gone before.
The rate of building increased in the early thirties reaching a peak in 1936 when 370 000 houses were completed.
In many cases the fact that new build projects are zero rated for vat means that a demolish and rebuild can be a more cost effective option but sometimes as here the savings made in retaining the basic structure far outweigh the vat saving.
The result is a white rendered addition housing a new kitchen diner that leads out through to a smartly landscaped garden.
Houses in the 60s.
When your house was built can be an indication how easily your loft can be converted and therefore how much the job will cost if your home was built before 1960 it s likely to be ideal for a loft.
Split level houses were relatively common figures 2 and 3.
Foundation floors wall or roofs.
I agree with riverside that concentrating on the physical drive will do the building wonders.
Ideas for elevation of a semi detached 1960s house.
1960s houses are now around 50 to 60 years old.
Construction system for definitive reasons is the manner of constructing the whole or dominant part of the house 1.
This article deals with just some of the defects commonly found in traditionally built houses built during the 1960s some can also be found in houses of other decades.
However there was a trend towards semi detached unit development particularly on inner city sites that were being redeveloped.
The bungalow came into its own between the wars.
A 1960s semi detached house in churchtown is to be extended reconfigured and modernised using a natural limited material palette to provide generous open plan spaces with an abundance of natural light for a growing family.
The house was extended on two floors at the back and all of the roof tiles were replaced with new slate.
Construction methods have improved since that time particularly with regard to thermal insulation and safety.
As you can see the roof on the house on the right is totally.
Most houses built in the 1970s were detached single storey units figure 1.
Houses in the 60s.
The commonest house type was the three bedroom semi detached house although developments often included detached houses and bungalows.
When the owners of this victorian semi detached home in a colchester conservation area wanted to replace a glazed lean to with a single storey extension and transform their sloping garden they turned to architect david nossiter to design a contemporary scheme.