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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Business
Emma Dunn & Saffron Otter

'We made our house worth £230k more with renovations - and changing roof to this colour'

A couple has managed to add a staggering £230,000 to the value of their 1950s bungalow - and part of the renovations included a simple £400 change to their roof.

Thanks to their impressive DIY efforts, the pair have boosted the property's curb appeal by simply painting their roof a new colour.

Ellie Rimmer, 27, and James Lawrence, 28, cleaned each individual tile on the roof before painting them black instead of buying a whole new set of tiles, which would have set them back a whopping £4,500.

The cash-strapped couple spent just £400 on the job, saving them £4,100 in the process.

They came up with the idea when thinking about how they could transform the outside appearance of their home for cheap after already spending more than £100,000 on the renovation.

After research, Ellie discovered tile paint existed and bought £400 worth to coat their existing brown tiles twice.

Ellie Rimmer and James Lawrence (Ellie Rimmer / SWNS)
They cleaned every tile (Ellie Rimmer / SWNS)

Ellie and James, a company director, along with Ellie's dad, Gary Rimmer, 60, a sales director, cleaned each tile one by one with a wire brush and spent around four 10-hour days painting the tiles.

Now, Ellie and James couldn't be happier with their handiwork and say doing the DIY themselves is 'satisfying'.

Ellie, a project manager for the NHS, from Brighton, East Sussex, said: "I have done a lot of upcycling in the past.

"I just thought 'surely you can paint tiles'. I Googled it, and it did exist.

"To save money on new tiles, we cleaned them all by hand.

"With the first coat – the tiles drunk the paint. So we did two coats and all with brushes."

The couple painted the tiles black with special paint (Ellie Rimmer / SWNS)
They transformed the roof (Ellie Rimmer / SWNS)

She added: "It fits with the rest of the house. We saved thousands."

The couple bought their two-bed bungalow for £400k in September 2021 and have been renovating it ever since into a four-bed house - spending £120k so far.

Ellie said: "We started stripping it all out straight away. It wasn't habitable.

"It was built in the 50s and I don't think it had been touched since.

"We ripped the entire house back to the bare bones."

The savvy couple created a loft conversion to create two extra bedrooms and bathrooms upstairs.

With the cost of their renovation rising, they wanted to find a way to fix the marked and moss-covered tiles cheaply.

Ellie said: "We had always planned to give them a clean. I saw painting tiles is done quite a lot in Australia.

They stripped back the property (Ellie Rimmer / SWNS)
The kitchen now (Ellie Rimmer / SWNS)

"While the roof was off for the extension, we cleaned them. They were all mix-matched and marked.

"When the tiles went back on the roof had changed size, so we were a few tiles short."

Ellie managed to find the remaining 500 tiles on Facebook marketplace from an old church for £150.

With the roof back on but the scaffolding still up from their builders, Ellie and James worked tirelessly to paint them in April 2022.

Ellie: "It's very windy where we live so we couldn’t use spray.

"Some of the neighbours would stop by as we were doing it to tell us looked amazing.

"You've got to trust the process. A year on it looks the same."

The bathroom before... (Ellie Rimmer / SWNS)
... and after (Ellie Rimmer / SWNS)

The couple has nearly finished the renovations and have been living in their home for the last eight months.

They recently had their house valued and were told it was worth £630k - which is £230k more than they paid for the property originally.

Ellie said they are starting the decorations for the last bathroom and will then have the patio to complete next summer.

She said: "We project managed it ourselves. We did the research to find things cheaper.

"Doing the bits yourself – it's satisfying.

"We're finally being able to enjoy it. There is light at the end of the tunnel."

Do you have a story to share? Please get in touch at webfeatures@trinitymirror.com

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