Our brickies are apparently "very good", but they are just so slow. They are due to finish mid December, so that allows them another couple of weeks. So many houses have sprung up around us and are now ahead, some of them are by our builder, so if we got a "very good" brickie team, who did they get?
It all looks really good though, so maybe their strength is their quality and not their speed.
I will bombard you with pictures now.
Side View from front corner
Inside Garage focusing on the shopper's entry. We plan to hang a vertical tool shelf on that recessed wall there.
Inside the hallway looking out through front entry. The hallway is one of my favourite parts of the house.
Our master bedroom. I love the windows.
The study. It's small.. not sure a queen bed would fit in here. But it's for sewing and studying!
A close view of our tiny ensuite. Big ensuites are so luxurious, but I sacrificed for a bigger Walk in Robe.
A closer view of our Walk in Robe. It's a decent size, but one day I'd love the one Big built for Carrie. (sex in the City)
Guest Room.. It may end up as mother in law's room, depending on what the future holds.
Looking into the laundry and out the sliding door.
Standing inside the kitchen, looking through what will eventually be a whole wall, and the room you can see is the guest room.
Toilet. Wishing I'd found a way to make it a powder room.
Close up of bathroom.
I think this is my daughter's bedroom. Wondering if I should have moved that window across a little, as her built in robe will be on the right hand side of this picture.
Son's room.
View of our alfresco double slider again. I just love it.
View of theatre, no internal walls yet.
View from corner of master bedroom looking aross the house, you can see the alfresco doors at the opposite end.
View from inside master bedroom looking at ensuite, Walk in Robe and seeing into the next room which is the Study.
View from master bedroom looking at the hallway wall. I guess some artwork or photographs will be hung on that wall.
Closeup of internal brickwork, it's shabbier compared to outside. I think they need the gaps for plaster to hold.
External brick, see how it's neater with less gaps.
Here's a closeup of the builder's bricks used on the internal part of the walls. (As in double brick, normal bricks face outside, these ones inside.)
Seeing laundry door from the street.
Back corner of house, from street. Those rooms are the kids' rooms.
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