Homebuilding & Renovating

“SELF-BUILDING OUR FIRST HOME”

Lucy Newton and Sam Hopkins defied the planning odds and achieved their home on a tight budget, thanks to an energetic can-do attitude

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A young couple build an oak-frame home on family land in Yorkshire, for £270k

Along with many of her family members, Lucy Newton has lived on a picturesqu­e 50-acre smallholdi­ng close to York for much of her life. Her great grandfathe­r bought the land nearly 80 years ago; it is now managed by her parents, who live next to her grandma, who is, in turn, neighbour to Lucy’s aunt and uncle.

“I loved growing-up here and, apart from a few years living away at university where I met my partner, Sam, I’ve never wanted to live anywhere else,” says Lucy. “Sam and I want to take over the smallholdi­ng one day, but we needed somewhere to live. We hoped to build our own home but we had to find a way to navigate planning first.”

AN OAK FRAME DESIGN

Lucy and Sam had their eye on a street-facing, unsightly asbestos shed next to her parents’ 1930s house, the original property on the smallholdi­ng. Flat open fields extend for miles around them with a lake and woodland that Lucy’s grandfathe­r spent his lifetime nurturing. However, with the location half a mile outside the village, the couple faced a major problem. “We’re not in the developmen­t zone so we knew there was a high chance planning would reject our applicatio­n,” Lucy explains.

After the couple graduated university in the summer of 2014, they decided to begin turning their dream of building a home on the site into a reality, and moved in with Lucy’s parents. Sam, who’d studied design in his Building Services Engineerin­g degree, produced the drawings, supported by retired architect Ron Illingswor­th, a friend of Lucy’s parents.

“We wanted an energy-efficient house and had been inspired by oak-frame designs we’d seen in magazines, but we thought this might blow our budget,” says Sam.

Not one to give up, Sam progressed an oak-frame design, with in structural insulated panels (SIPS) and clad in chestnut. The street-front elevation was designed to look modest compared the rear, which features two glazed gables facing the views. Sam also found a solution to planning department’s ridge height restrictio­ns by designing a tempered pitched roof: a 11m flat section runs the through the middle of the roof, meaning the ridge height is kept low, but the interiors have high ceilings in most rooms.

SECURING A MORTGAGE

By spring 2016, Lucy’s parents had handed over ownership of a 400m2 parcel of land where the asbestos shed was sited; Lucy and Sam had also decided to employ planning consultant­s, KVA Planning. “We didn’t have a lot of money to play with but our consultant was knowledgea­ble and empathetic,” says Lucy. “I don’t think we’d have got planning without her advice.”

At the end of 2016, planning permission was approved but the couple needed to source suppliers and arrange a mortgage, so building work didn’t start until early 2018. By then they’d accrued £30,000 in savings to put towards their £250,000 budget.

“Only two lenders agreed to lend on a timber build, which meant we had to accept a variable interest rate, which was expensive,” says Lucy. “Fortunatel­y, Mansfield Building Society allowed us to offset the first payment against the land, which got us watertight before we needed more funds.”

Sam took on the role of project manager. “I costed out the entire design, packaging up key stages to get quotes,” he explains.

“We found a supplier willing to help us find a way to afford an oak frame within our budget. The impact of oak has turned our design from ordinary into a home with character”

With their hearts still set on an oak frame, the couple approached local firm Parker Oak, who agreed to tailor their oak frame design to one they could afford.

“Then we got SIP Build UK to supply and install the SIPS,” adds Sam, “but we hired a telehandle­r and crane ourselves. Creating packages of work saved us a fair bit of money.”

GETTING STUCK IN

Lucy and Sam were keen to be hands-on during the build along with invaluable help from Lucy’s dad, John, a skilled bricklayer, tiler and joiner.

One snowy day in January 2018 they began the footings, but digging proved challengin­g in the sandy-clay soil. The trenches collapsed and filled with water, but they had to press on to meet Parker Oak’s schedule to erect the oak frame.

“We poured the ground floor slab with just five days drying time,” says Sam. “We were worried frost would crack the concrete so we laid plastic over the top, held down with ladders and planks.” Within a couple of months, the house was watertight and the couple turned their attentions to installing the septic tank. The challenge was filling the tank with water at the same time as filling the surroundin­g hole with concrete to secure it in place.

“This was the most stressful part of the entire build,” Lucy recalls. “We struggled to get the water in fast enough and the tank rose too high.we cut our losses as it would’ve been impossible to get out, and began again with a second tank — with more success this time!”

The couple spent the next year painstakin­gly working through the very long list of jobs to complete their new home, using trades only when necessary, and juggling their full-time jobs. The big day came on the 31st August 2019.

“We’d lived and breathed the build for so long that for the first few months living here felt surreal,” says Lucy. “We both feel a huge sense of achievemen­t now we’re finished and feel very lucky as we couldn’t have done this without my parents’ help or Sam’s skills.”

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An air source heat pump (above) provides the house with hot water and underfloor heating. The French chestnut cladding will weather while the bifold doors connect the house to the beautiful countrysid­e.
NATURAL CONNECTION An air source heat pump (above) provides the house with hot water and underfloor heating. The French chestnut cladding will weather while the bifold doors connect the house to the beautiful countrysid­e.
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 ??  ?? THE KITCHEN
The Fairford Slate Grey Howdens’ kitchen contrasts with a hardwearin­g dark grey limestone flooring from Doga Natural Stone. The white quartz surfaces from Belgravis Stone and pink splashback tiles from Porcelain Superstore provide a delicate balance.
THE KITCHEN The Fairford Slate Grey Howdens’ kitchen contrasts with a hardwearin­g dark grey limestone flooring from Doga Natural Stone. The white quartz surfaces from Belgravis Stone and pink splashback tiles from Porcelain Superstore provide a delicate balance.
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 ??  ?? THE GROUND FLOOR A woodburner from Stovax sits at the heart of the largely open-plan living area and supplement­s the underfloor heating, supplied by Pro Screed, on chilly winter evenings. Meanwhile, fixed panels of triple glazing (left) with e-coating reduce solar gain on the south-west rear.
THE GROUND FLOOR A woodburner from Stovax sits at the heart of the largely open-plan living area and supplement­s the underfloor heating, supplied by Pro Screed, on chilly winter evenings. Meanwhile, fixed panels of triple glazing (left) with e-coating reduce solar gain on the south-west rear.

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