Warehouse Remodel - Ft Worth TX Hull Homes office is awesome!
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- Опубліковано 14 лис 2019
- www.buildshownetwork.com
Matt is visiting Hull Historical and Hull Homes up in Fort Worth TX to see how Builder Brent Hull remodeled this former Nabisco factory into a Beautiful Office! Stick around till the end to hear our big announcement about our new Network!
Follow Matt on Instagram! / risingerbuild
or Twitter / mattrisinger
Follow Brent at / hullmillwork_hullhomes
For BTS content check out / thebuildshow
Huge thanks to our Show sponsors Polywall, Huber, Dorken Delta, Prosoco, Rockwool & Viewrail for helping to make these videos possible! These are all trusted companies that Matt has worked with for years and trusts their products in the homes he builds. We would highly encourage you to check out their websites for more info.
www.Poly-Wall.com
www.Dorken.com
www.Huberwood.com
www.Prosoco.com
www.Viewrail.com
www.Rockwool.com
I once worked for Brent at Hull Historical in that very building.
Brent is a well of knowledge and a great teacher. The build show network can only grow with an addition like Brent and the team at Hull.
They carry the test of time and integrity to every project.
Happy to see Hull doing so well.
Brent Hull's videos are killer and a great change of pace from Matt's pioneering work! Go watch them all right now!
2024 still good content.
2:00 That why I “know” him....have seen him on TV, & have grown up watching him😁 & believe I saw him do a “talk” once.
Matt, have always enjoyed all your videos & am so glad I “accidentally” found your UA-cam channel 11 hrs ago (oh man, do I feel old now😅). Some of my favs are the factory tours, & when you travel to other building sites/shows(Europe etc...).....it’s so great to “see” how other parts of the world, BUILD👍🏻
Cheers✌🏼
Good to see they are doing that in Ft Worth. They started converting old warehouses in downtown Dallas West End many years ago.
And it’s still a shithole
What a BEAUTIFUL BUILDING!
WOW, great video. Brent has a great appreciation for restoration. I appreciate a true craftsman home builder. Homes with thought, style, and character. Sadly he is in Texas. When he is ready to take a real challenge our home built in 1884. Yes before indoor plumbing and electricity in every home. We have asbestos shakes over clapboard siding, gas pipes in the walls from lighting, the original wooden windows with weights and wavy glass, limestone foundation (think root cellar), and an octopus heater - converted from coal to oil to natural gas. Square nails (handmade vs machine-made) and irregular wood that appears hand sawn.
Far out I'm in Burleson and I have been building houses for 39'years now &I love working on old houses plus I love metal detecting the old places 😎grate video buddy
Awesome restoration/repurposing. What a deal for $60,000
LOVE THIS! thanks
Wow cool old time simple stuff. Very impressive.
Mr Risinger
Congrats on your new network!
I wish you all the success in the world.
Old building are the history of the city. They need to be saved and preserved.
We are too eager to tear old buildings down.
Good to see the direction the channel is going, with the new builders.
Thanks Matt, that was terrific, love the historical stuff. Congratulations on the new show, heck you may not have time to keep building homes!
New Orleans is my original home- as a teenager, hunting bucks to repair my first car, I got into hunting down old Hunter ceiling fans- nearly every old neighborhood in town had houses that were built long before HVAC was invented, and so had a bunch in the attic. Bought, cleaned of dust and sold to the specialty shops that could rewind them was a fast $5-$10 to buy, an hour of my labor and $25 from the rebuild shops! Hunter as a company was moribund and had nearly no business- mostly they were refurbing their own products and making about 50- 100 fans a month so the little appliance shops were making out like bandits rewinding and replacing the bearings, renewing 75-100 year old fans- some were even DC! But I started on old houses- when you got toward town, the buildings got even older- structural brick was doable; you just drove triples of piles to the solid soil with a steam pile driver! It looked to me that sometimes there was enough wood to float the structure on!.
I live just down the road from FW- in Dallas County; they tear every thing old down, find arsonists to burn down inconvenient old National Register structures and replace it with chrome and glass. Although I will say they have been getting better and better architects the last 20 years- but it is not the same- like the Calatravas designed "Signature" Bridge built a few years ago- three times the cost of a "standard" bridge, all the architecture is expensive steel ginger bread that will cost two million dollars a year to keep painted and rust free. I have to admire what Mr. Hull does- I may have seen some of his work- I had several service clients in Bellaire, south of downtown FW. The Tandy mansion, as well as his long time chief legal officer (both sadly passed, the homes sold off) were among them- beautiful homes! Somebody told me the Tandy Mansion was originally built for $35K, about 1915.Wow! Most of the old homes like that are located in a small district of Dallas, and most of them have been butchered by remodels, many done since the neighborhood revival beginning 25-30 years ago. Quality is never really out of style- it just becomes to pricy to compete with the "newer, better, racy" new stuff. Love the ole Nabisco Dist Center- Hull deserves it, and will keep much of it's flavor and character.FR
That’s great news, looking forward to more, varied content
Cool to see the Souders prints on the office wall! My wife's family grew up with the Souders family here in Fort Worth.
Awsome
My great grandfather worked National Biscuit in NYC. He was a delivery driver. Today's Chelsea Market in Manhattan was a National Biscuit factory.
Love the look and design of old homes!!! Would love to see you come up to St.Paul and check out some Victorian restorations. I imagine there are a lot!
Wow good idea 👍🏻
I think this is turning into,
"THIS OLD HOUSE"
TOH is Matt's fave childhood TV show.
Looking forward to more of Hull Historical. I'm wondering if he sticks sealed double panes in those old school frames - that would be fantastic combined with modern insulation and wiring.
lol, my grandparents had a wholesale grocery warehouse back in the 70's right down the street. Had the big Pepsi logo on the side of the building. Whenever my parents went to visit, I always remember my introduction to guns as a 6 or 7 year old, the rent-a-thug at the entry door showing me his shotgun and cheap .38 special, who was there because my grandparents got tired of being robbed at gun point. Looks like a nicer area now..
That boiserie would easily made a full UA-cam episode for woodwork reference. Great introduction.
Matt! Just wanted to let you know your changing peoples minds about building better.
I do hvac and home performance i just had a call to go to a house where customer Is building his own home “homeowner builder type”. It was in the process of building a standard Florida home and then ran into your videos and changed his whole design. open cell in the attic Prosecco type on the windows and now wants to do a blower door Test to make sure the foam in the attic is correctly done. Variable speed heat pump system as well. 👍
come down and do a video man! CBS block doesn’t have stucco yet window should be in soon
Matt, you should come to the East Coast - we have these buildings all over the place. My office was built in 1839, a two story school house utilizing native Pennsylvania stone. It was heated with a cast iron coal fired furnace in the basement with hot air rising through vents in the floors. The chimney for the furnace was buried in the north facing stone wall, directly adjacent to where the teacher stood. The window sash was replaced with new wood windows (non-insulating glass - with interior storm windows to preserve the history character of the building) in wood window frames placed in the building in 1905. There is much more - BUT
You didn't show how the building was made ADA Accessible? Even old buildings need to meet building codes for accessibility and energy performance.
I hope they will pressure-washer outside brick.
I used to work in that building!
stepchildofsoul wow! What are the odds
@@TheExcellentLaborer Well, it helps that I grew up two blocks from there. I'm glad the old place is being lived in and cared for.
There were some builders that were so cheap, when we glued stuff up, sometimes we wouldn't even give them a biscuit.
Brent has a killer style, that building is beautiful.
Website not set up yet?
I love your show but, would to see you teach more best building practices.
dude, there is 10 years worth of how to's on his channel. the construction industry is not like the tech industry. As a builder and RE investor, I appreciate these videos. Gives you a different perspective on different ways to build.
The Family Man Best practices take experience
Good video, building is amazing!! I'm not in love with the shameless buildshow watermark but that's just my opinion
I don't mind that since Matt's channel isn't monetized (being abrupted by ads isn't to my liking). I have more issues with that super noisy air condition in the large room : )
@@richardmckrell4899 Don't mind that either, he is open and clear with this and every youtube channel is marketing in some or the other way.
@@richardmckrell4899 I'm sure you're right. I don't watch every video but the ones I watch is often as transparent as I would want and I'm damn picky and tired of youtubers not being transparent with all stuff they get sponsored with.
Still very happy to see Matt hasn't monetized the channel.
Hope we don't lose you on youtube
(nevermind! I shouldn't fear)
Not going anywhere
As long as he remains monitized UA-cam won't drop him. UA-cam is just going after the unprofitable channels.
Good guy!
Can you imagine how much it would cost to lay all those bricks in today's prices ?
At 16:43, you can see what looks like some yahoo painted over those gorgeous wood doors and now they're stripping them, that's a shame and should be against the law, lol. JMO.
I agree, but it's better to have them painted and survive, rather than left to rot.
He looks like Will Ferrell!
cant access the buildshownetwork.com
Type www before it, we’re fixing it
Kaufman’s? Matt are you a yinzer?!?
Yup. Mt Lebanon class of 91
I always find it strange when Americans see an old properly built building. This is the way all old buildings are constructed in the UK.
That is mainly due to WWII. After the war there was a huge baby boom and builders scrambled to construct everything fast and cheap. And they never got out of that mentality. If the public continued to buy it they continued to throw them together without concern.
The mortar and tuck pointing on the front of the building was probably done in lime and that is why there are so cracks, I would say that 25% of British houses are built like this, hardly any foundations, just a self sealing wall, no Portland at all.
Why can't you promote small Reno! Carpenters, contractors, builders? Affordable work for budgets?
I asked that about a month ago and was told that I should be watching other channels ! lol.
Keep the trades alive!
There was no crappy material back in the early 20th century.wake up .old growth is no more,in my short time quality never goes out of style fin
Arrows that point to nothing AND a clickbait title? Horrible thumbnail. Watch 30 seconds and close. Thumbs down.
Jack Maher they’re pointing to the skylight smart guy
My comment is about the thumbnail. Do you see a skylight in the thumbnail?
Jack Maher hm. Let’s see. It’s a channel about building and building science. Two guys are in a dark warehouse room. They’re looking up and their faces are illuminated, yet there are no lights to be seen. You don’t need to be Sherlock Holmes to figure out they’re looking a skylight.
Seth Bracken 1) It could also be lightning.
2) It’s still a clickbait thumbnail.