George Clarke's Old House, New Home
George helps a young couple make sense of their Victorian terrace house he visits a woman converting two listed cottages into a family home.
George helps a young couple make sense of their Victorian terrace house he visits a woman converting two listed cottages into a family home.
George works on a tricky conversion of a beautiful Arts and Crafts building he works on an 18th-century country pub saddled with some dodgy DIY.
George works on a stripped Victorian terrace in Plumstead, looking to create a new layout that won't break the bank he also visits a magnificent villa near Liverpool.
George takes on an Edwardian home suffering from an extreme case of 1970s wall-to-wall paneling he also tackles a mock Tudor cottage in Hastings.
George meets solicitor Dawn, who's embarking on a mammoth renovation of her local village shop in Yorkshire, in a bid to turn it into a luxurious home for her and her two sons her plans include turning a storage room into an outdoor oasis.
Yohance bought an office unit on a commercial estate in London he plans to turn it into a two-bedroom house it was half the price of residential equivalents nearby, but it's a cavernous, sterile and dark space, so the odds are stacked against him.
Architect George Clarke returns to unlock the potential of old houses he meets teachers Simon and Sofie, whose 1930s Liverpool semi has lost its way thanks to a small kitchen and some dodgy interior design choices made by the previous owner.
Stuart and Theresa are looking to downsize, ready for retirement, until they see a huge and cavernous village hall for sale bigger than they bargained for, it was an opportunity too good to pass up.
George meets Peter and Julia, who had run their local post office, and has lived in the building above it for the last 20 years.
George meets James, who has had a 15-year love affair with a former glassworks in Brighton when he finally managed to buy it, he has grand plans to restore the whole property.
In Cornwall, George meets Abi and Morveth, who've sunk their life savings into a disused electrical substation after two-and-a-half years, two extensions, an extra floor and hundreds of hours of work, the result is an absolutely unique home.
Paul and his wife Imogen decide to swap the countryside for the town, snapping up a collection of run-down and abandoned buildings with ambitious plans to restore the Grade II listed buildings, there are long delays and eye-watering costs.
George offers a sympathetic hand with a monster Victorian semi and a beautiful Regency conversion.
George has some radical ideas to redesign an Edwardian home he tackles a Victorian mishmash, some MDF, a quirky fireplace and a random room.
In a six-part series, architectural historian Dan Cruickshank visits houses in Britain never before open to public view, including South Wraxall Manor, Kinross House in Scotland, Easton Neston, Wentworth Woodhouse, Clandeboye in Northern Ireland, and Marshcourt. Cruickshank roams the corridors and rummages in the cellars as he tells the story of each house -- who built them, the generations who lived in them, and the families who lost them.
In a six-part series, architectural historian Dan Cruickshank visits houses in Britain never before open to public view, including South Wraxall Manor, Kinross House in Scotland, Easton Neston, Wentworth Woodhouse, Clandeboye in Northern Ireland, and Marshcourt. Cruickshank roams the corridors and rummages in the cellars as he tells the story of each house -- who built them, the generations who lived in them, and the families who lost them.
In a six-part series, architectural historian Dan Cruickshank visits houses in Britain never before open to public view, including South Wraxall Manor, Kinross House in Scotland, Easton Neston, Wentworth Woodhouse, Clandeboye in Northern Ireland, and Marshcourt. Cruickshank roams the corridors and rummages in the cellars as he tells the story of each house -- who built them, the generations who lived in them, and the families who lost them.
In a six-part series, architectural historian Dan Cruickshank visits houses in Britain never before open to public view, including South Wraxall Manor, Kinross House in Scotland, Easton Neston, Wentworth Woodhouse, Clandeboye in Northern Ireland, and Marshcourt. Cruickshank roams the corridors and rummages in the cellars as he tells the story of each house -- who built them, the generations who lived in them, and the families who lost them.
In a six-part series, architectural historian Dan Cruickshank visits houses in Britain never before open to public view, including South Wraxall Manor, Kinross House in Scotland, Easton Neston, Wentworth Woodhouse, Clandeboye in Northern Ireland, and Marshcourt. Cruickshank roams the corridors and rummages in the cellars as he tells the story of each house -- who built them, the generations who lived in them, and the families who lost them.
In a six-part series, architectural historian Dan Cruickshank visits houses in Britain never before open to public view, including South Wraxall Manor, Kinross House in Scotland, Easton Neston, Wentworth Woodhouse, Clandeboye in Northern Ireland, and Marshcourt. Cruickshank roams the corridors and rummages in the cellars as he tells the story of each house -- who built them, the generations who lived in them, and the families who lost them.