Mike’s Kitchen Overhaul | Holmes on Homes 710
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- Опубліковано 5 жов 2024
- Drill down on Jeremy’s kitchen reno with Mike and find nothing but cosmetic fixes on top of a host of old problems. Watch the crew take it back to the studs, upgrade the underlying systems, and deliver a gorgeous space built on solid foundations.
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#HomeRenovation #Construction #Makeover
We’re dropping 5 videos per week until the end of the year! 🎥 Make sure to check back daily! what are you most excited to see? Let us know! 👇
Holmes on homes is always a good choice.
Why till the end of the year
Anything new? It all seems like reruns.
I love this show but I wouldn't mind more of the millionaire home shopping show, can't remember the name. Also Holmes Inspection!
It would be great if the videos weren't reruns.
I don't care how old this video may be, this is the first time I see this episode. So thank you very much for loading it, something different to see.
I agree with Mike Holmes on gutting an old house all the way back to the outside walls to get things completely done the right way!
Agree! My husband would laugh about gutting, not necessary! That is until we redid the kitchen and main bathroom and I insisted, oh boy, what we discovered!!
What a nice owner….he’s a good guy and deserves a great kitchen/stairs/roof/etc etc.
I was on the crew for a complete gut and renovation job on a semi-detached home in Toronto. the place was at least a hundred years old. There was evidence of at least 7 previous renovations in which plaster was patched, more flooring was laid down and another layer was added to the ceilings. The place was full of horse-hair plaster, gas pipes for gas lighting, obsolete wireing and plumbing that looked like some nightmare monster from an HP Lovecraft novel. Obviously, nobody had ever done anything but cosmetic work to the place. By the time we were done gutting the place, only the main timbers, outer brick walls and sub-floors remained. That was the starting point.
And yes, we pulled out the old stairs. Not only were they irregularly spaced, but they were also worn out.
Sounds like the house I grew up in.
And, yes, my parents did renovations and upgrades as we could. I can't tell you how many buckets of horsehair plaster I hauled out of there.
The downside of that experience is that I have a visceral hatred of drywall.
I can't stand it. I hate its look, I hate its smell, its dusty grittiness when you cut it, the plaster you need to use to make it look acceptable and the processes to get it to the point where a coat of paint makes it acceptable in appearance.
When I built my own home, I only used lumber-mill hemlock and ship-lapped the inside walls. I used a Daddo to mill a half-inch mortice on every edge, so that as the wood dried there would be no reveal.
I'm happy with the result...........................
@@karlbrundage7472 My main beef with plaster is that the people with the skills to do the job properly are both rare and expensive. Also, the dust cloud we raised while stripping out that house was terrible. Even though we wore masks the whole time, we were coughing up black stuff for days.
When we were done, the place had insulation and vapour barrier where there had been only strapping. A main floor powder room and an upper floor four piece bathroom where there had been one 3 piece bathroom. We changed the upper floor plan to two larger bedrooms from three smaller bedrooms. The main floor was changed to an open concept from three small rooms and a hallway. The new stairways were all oak. The electrical was upgraded to a 200 amp service with all split circuit outlets in the kitchen and grounds from 60 amp knob and tube. The plumbing was a complete replacement from the water meter to the main sewer line. All the places where the floor used to squeak were shimmed and screwed down. And all new windows, of course.
The only thing we did not do was mess with the basic structure. The stairs stayed where they were.
Love Mike and his crew. True professionalism ❤
As old as it is lovely to see a homeowner that have atleast reseach what likely to expect and not get suprise but expecting it. Also, ask for the right thing, gut, and tell me of any issues that I need to pay extra to fix.
"Really enjoying all the videos." So much great content to watch and so little time. Not for me I'm retired ;-) Thank You so much for showing us all these excellent Homes videos!
Good ol' Holmes on Homes.
Those sun tunnels are awesome, I had just a single 14" installed on our upper landing this summer and the daylight it brings in is amazing.
Looking forward to next week for the end result. Hope the gentleman heals well. Bless you all Blessing Boys
Great work as usual, loved the outro :)
😂at 30:15
....
Couldn't help myself, it's the man in me😅
Bring it down to the stud. You can put lipstic on a pig, but it is still a pig. Mike did it right and he was just as much a victim of the terrace holt scammers as anyone else. The only way he was going to make any money off of it was if the homebuyers agreed to pay extra to have their homes inspected by Mike himself, but no one opted to do that. everyone was scammed, including Mike.
Warranties are only as good as the company that offers them!! $30 k for a remodel is about right considering nobody can predict outcomes on wall gutting and flooring sagging causes!!!
yeah, you just told the world, LOL
Hope the homeowner sues the contractor.
Holmes on homes
😊
Stop growing, haha. I'm 6'6" and my dad is 5'8".
Can you testify for the owner so dodgy contractor can not get more money from him
nice owner, I bet he could fly if he moved his ears just so.
But Mike still hasn't made it right for the people in TerraceWood. His excuse is that his endorsement means nothing.
Seriously Mike is a good guy shut up @ncooty
@RobertSmith229 I used to think so as well. I enjoyed watching him for years and own 3 of his books. Are you familiar with the TerraceWood case? It'll change how you see him.
Not cool to mock a worried mother and go around telling everyone something your client asked you not to tell people.
What mocking? He was letting Mike know his mother let him know her son wouldn’t be in - and to not tell the other workers :)
One of the workers not the client, you've never been on a close crew of some kind. They all live to get some incident like this on a co-worker, they will tease the crap out of him. But I guarantee if something was really wrong other than a bad cold/flu, that whole crew would be there for him.
He says he didnt want cheap but $30k is as cheap as it gets for a kitchen and nothing in there is high end quality if you want a good quality high end custom kitchen expect to pay at minimum $70k if not more also Mike the stairs had nothing to do with the kitchen they didnt need to be redone
Have fun trolling Deanna? What a Karen.....
Couple points to make: 1. This was filmed in 2008, so pricing was much cheaper then. 2. The homeowner bought all the appliances himself, outside of the contract, which was likely $4k-$8k roughly. 3. The original stairs did not have a railing, if you know Mike, he does not leave safety issues unfixed, so they had to do it. Also needed to be supported, the floor above was already sagging, needed to solidify that.
1. This was filmed 20+ years ago.
2. This is a very small kitchen.
3. The $30k was only for the structural repairs and install, no cabinetry or appliances.
No need to be rude.
Do you expect gold to be used for the Reno. 70, laughable. Small kitchen.
@@robinrobine8100 no actual thats a decent bare minimum price for a kitchen reno that has high end appliances in actuality it really should be about $100k for a proper size kitchen not the shoeboxes Mike likes
THE KNOW IT ALL INTERNET ........ PATHETIC !!!!