Might have to replace the water tower.
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Might have to replace the water tower.
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You still got that other block as well ?? The one we went to the trouble of designing a fang dangled mansion for ??
Becoming quite the land baron.
Nope it fell through. The old girl who owned it had lodged the papers with the local farmers bank some years ago.Originally Posted by Nawty
Joy went with her to sort things out.
The bank manager was quite pleased to see the old girl.
Particularly as the dear old bat hadn't understood the small matter of "interest".
With interest owed it quadrupled the cost!
We decided not to get involved.
Gorgeous setting. Methinks FF might have the word on this one, take it apart and rebuild it to your liking.
cheers. Yes, it is a nice spot. Finally.Originally Posted by shunpike
Just had a house about the size as yours raised and moved about 1 meter to the left. House was on 2 meter columns. Raised it to 3 meters. All done with jacks and come alongs. Cost was about 10,000 baht.Originally Posted by jandajoy
Now that is good news. CheersOriginally Posted by Norton
This must be the 3rd or 4th time over the last year you have announced you are buying a property and I sincerely hope this time it all goes well for you and Joy.Originally Posted by jandajoy
The Thais are ingenious when it comes to lifting and moving things so you shouldn't have a problem.![]()
Yours likely more expensive. Will be a lot trickier raising from ground level.Originally Posted by jandajoy
No doubt but at least it won't be millions. We'll talk it over with folk in the area and see what ideas they come up with. No rush.Originally Posted by Norton
just to wish u luck jj, it looks great to me, and raising it,, same same frankie says for my money, resiting it is good too , love the views. just a little envious mate.
as i say good luck with it.![]()
yep that's how it's done, seen it happen somewhere don't remember where but thought it was ingeniousOriginally Posted by Nawty
Thanks mate. It'll be a long slow project, but I reckon it'll come out OK.Originally Posted by lob
BTW, raising the house is but one of the cost considerations. Need to figure in cement, plumbing and electrical rework if needed.
dismantling the house is easy, as long as they take a bit of care. Wood houses are very simple and come apart quickly, and go up again almost as fast
just do the proper foundations and concrete columns, probably with connecting beams
you can then rebuild to slighly higher specs. You will find you need to buy some more wood to replace anything split or rotted, but that is the best way to go
I have reported your post
You're right, but it's all good. We'll take our time and get the rewiring and plumbing done properly. All new I think.Originally Posted by Norton
Yup, it looks like dismantling is the way to. Fortunately we're very close to Laos so wood may well be available - discretely.Originally Posted by DrAndy
How's the present house set up inside? Thai kitchen out back with a lounge area inside and a bedroom or two? Also do you have any idea of the size of the living space, ie how many square meters. It doesn't look overly big from the pix, but they can be deceiving.
more photos to follow
looks a good size from those
the best thing about dismantling it will be the new layout you can design
you may be able to do away with any internal columns/poles too, if you redesign the roof trusses etc
I did that on my wooden house, it made the internal space really nice
Very true. The 2 bathrooms will probably get taken out and new ones built.Originally Posted by DrAndy
The cement bit on the left is the downstairs dunny. Just a squat job.
JJ the house looks like it will work out to be a nice place after a while. The pictures of the location are beautiful and I wish I had a view like that. Having never lived in northern Thailand, I have never seen a chimney here. Good luck with the project.
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