Swedish Forest House Tour | I Bought a House in the Middle of Sweden’s Wilderness

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  • Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 878

  • @captaincarl1603
    @captaincarl1603 10 месяцев назад +234

    Hello Phillip!
    As a native Swede owning, and having restored, many similar houses in the countryside I think you made a good deal, depending on location of course.
    The upstairs bathroom represents a total lack of knowledge and responsibility on behalf of the previous owner, which unfortunately is quite common.
    And yes, Your feeling that the electrical installment in the bathroom is illegal is very much correct - Illegal and dangerous!
    However, it's actually not a very big deal for an electrician to move the entire circuit-box to a different room.
    It's not cheap, but I'm sure you can get a quote that is not as expensive as you may fear.
    These old houses were not designed to have bathrooms at all since they had outhouses. You can absolutely put a real bathroom in but it has to be done right.
    Local plumbers and carpenters in the countryside are normally used to working with these challenges and can build a new bathroom that will work well in your old house.
    Remember that you may get a better deal if you do the work off-season. A roof-layer for example will be most busy in the fall when people need the roof waterproof
    for the upcoming winter. So possibly it's easier negotiate the price for a new roof in the spring.
    As you mentioned, plumbing, electricity and chimney need to be handled by a licensed professional with the right paperwork.
    If not your insurance may not cover any damages that may occur. In worst case scenario, the house flooding or burning down.
    Also, make sure to upgrade your insurance to cover house-fungi (Äkta hussvamp). It's a relatively inexpensive option that will save you if your house
    becomes infested with this type of fungi that occurs in Sweden. If it happens there is basically nothing to do but demolishing the house and building a new one.
    It's not clear from your video, but if your house only has one air-heater (Luftvärmepump) I'm afraid that is not enough. That big of a house needs at least two of them.
    And don't get ripped off by the big sales organizations like Polarpumpen, Sverigepumpen or Zave that demand pre-payment.
    Get one from a local firm where the person you talk to on the phone is the same person that actually comes out and installs the heater for you, and then sends you the invoice.
    Another tip is to take out and clean the filter in your Air-heater (indoor unit). This will improve the efficiency of the heater.
    Judging by the state of the electrocution-bathroom, the previous owner more than likely has not done this.
    Another thing is that in the old days people had plenty of carpets in every room. Not only to keep their feet warm but to insulate the entire house from the cold ground.
    The thing with these old houses is that you can't just get advice and products from any modern home improvement store.
    If you insulate and seal your house with modern products and techniques you may end up with irreversible mold and fungi.
    If you paint with modern latex based paints over old linseed oil paint, the new paint may chip off after only a few months.
    The list goes on - and on. But remember, everything is possible and well worth the extra effort. You just have to teach yourself about old houses.
    Don't take advice from someone living in a modern house. Talk to owners of similar houses.
    Google everything about culture building renovations, and old craftsman methods. Ask the staff in the shops that specializes in renovation of old buildings.
    These shops products are usually quite expensive but you don't have to buy everything there. In many cases the knowledge itself is key. (links below)
    If you need all new bathroom furniture and fixtures there are some firms in Germany with really good prices including delivery to your doorstep.
    A good relation with neighboring farmers and foresters are key to success with your new property. They usually have left-overs from both suitable lumber and paint that they may sell
    for cheap, or sometimes even give away if they like you. Of course appreciating a bottle of Scotch in return :) Also, your underground pipes may break, your trees may fall,
    your road may collapse, or you may get snowed in. Then you are depending on help from the farmers trucks, tractors and excavators.
    To renovate our old houses takes a little longer, and a little more effort, than fixing up a modern house. But in the end it will guaranteed be worth it.
    To sum it up, congratulations to a beautiful house that, if cared for correctly, will bring you decades of joy and pride, as well as a long term good investment.
    ALL WELL!
    /Carl
    kulturhantverkarna.se/en/
    www.sekelskifte.com/en
    www.nackabyggnadsvard.se
    www.gysinge.com
    www.overjarvabyggnadsvard.se/c/begagnat/beg-dorrar-overjarvabyggandsvard/
    fonsterantiken.se/begagnat/dorrar

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +40

      Wow, thank you so much Carl, what an amazing comment! So much useful information there so I can’t thank you enough!
      I think I’m leaning towards changing out the bathroom because there’s a lot of things I don’t like about it but it’s great to know that an electrician would be able to move the entire box if necessary!
      Thanks for the information on the potential fungus issue, I will definitely make sure to look for my insurance policy and see if I can add that, especially with the chimneys, not being used in a couple of years!
      Yes, I am very lucky in that regard! My neighbour who is a couple of hundred metres away is actually a seasoned carpenter, and he lives in basically the exact same house that we do. he has been a very helpful to us so far so I’m very thankful!
      I didn’t actually show it on the video, but there are two heating pumps, one upstairs and one downstairs. They are both made by
      Daikin. Right now, I need to take off some ice from the defrosting pipe, but I think that the main reason they’re not working very well is because the roof is insulated with just sawdust and all the heat is escaping out of the roof.
      And I definitely agree with you in relation to the community aspect. I’ve been living in Sweden for four years and the intention is to integrate as much as I can until I am seen as Swedish. That means speaking the language and being involved in the community 😁 I’ve met a lot of people in my local area and they are all amazing people, and I’ve already needed the help as my car got stuck in deep snow recently. Scotch is definitely a good gift, I will make sure to have a good stockpile of it 😅
      Thanks for all these resources, Carl it’s amazing! And thank you so much for your support and positivity!
      Hälsningar,
      Phillip

    • @carolineleonard8214
      @carolineleonard8214 8 месяцев назад +6

      Wow, Carl has covered everything that I was going to say. My only difference would be to leave the electrical box where it is and put a new bathroom elsewhere. Then use this room for another purpose, as dressing/storage/office/spare bedroom as you already have the box for the extra sockets. BTW, get any electrical work that you want done, like sockets/lights/supplementary heating points before you refurbish rooms. It's expensive to do afterwards. On ceiling heights/insulation, you may be able to drop the ceilings and insulate the space in between. Those chimney holes make the chimney look structurally unsound, you may need to prioritise this to ensure you don't have a chimney collapse!! I have come across this before and also seen, and rebuilt a partial collapse, whilst no one was hurt the soot went into every area of the house. Great posts thus far, please keep them coming. All the best from Wales.

    • @carolineleonard8214
      @carolineleonard8214 8 месяцев назад +2

      On the landing area. How about a linen/towel cupboard at the top of the stairs on the right. By the windows/radiators, how about 2 x easy chairs, side table or similar for reading. Yep I paused on the bathroom/electrics cupboard. Illegal as fleck. Don't use and move the bathroom, use the room as a dressing room. You could always have a bath tub in your bedroom! Using the hot and cold supply from the current en suite. Just thoughts and you may guess that I love stuff like this, having done a few houses in My day. BTW hypothermia starts setting in at 10°C😮

    • @AntonyoKnight
      @AntonyoKnight 6 месяцев назад +2

      Carl, thanks for the well extended and supportive comments.
      Do you use IR (Infrared panels) for heating in Sweden?

    • @captaincarl1603
      @captaincarl1603 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@AntonyoKnight Yes but mainly outdoors. On patios, pool-decks and so on.

  • @jencarter6785
    @jencarter6785 10 месяцев назад +90

    Please get those chimneys fixed, those temperatures in your house are insane!! 😂 That said, congratulations on getting your dream house, it looks fabulous. can’t wait to follow your journey

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +13

      Thanks Jen I will get them fixed asap! Apparently the work that needed to be done couldn’t be carried out in winter so we had to wait but it is priority number 1 😁 Thank you so much!!

  • @bisratezra8247
    @bisratezra8247 8 месяцев назад +11

    I'm in bed in my well heated flat in Uppsala, yet I shiver while watching this video. Can't believe the temperatures you have to endure! But the house is so beautiful and will be great once fully restored. Welcome to Sweden!

  • @wanhaliitto
    @wanhaliitto 10 месяцев назад +112

    1. Make sure your pipes don't freeze. You will get water damage when they melt.
    2. First things to check after that is that your underground drains are working and that the roofs don't leak.
    3. Insulating doesn't do as much as you would think. It is expensive and largely not very effective.
    Also, you will introduce mould into an old house if you insulate it too much because old houses like that breathe through the walls by design. That is how they were intended to work. If you go against the original design expect all sorts of trouble.
    Therefore, instead, overdo the heating system. If electricity is cheap, that's good, you can use underfloor electric heating. If not, you need heat pumps. But on top of that you need to burn a ton of wood every year.
    The best system would be to have water pipes under floors and have a multi heater for the water which can warm the water with wood, electricity, even oil. But if that is not practical just add heat pumps and fire places and burn a ton of wood.
    Yes, I think that is what was most important to say.
    I've lived in an old house for a decade in Finland if you wonder whence cometh these opinions.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +10

      This is great advice thank you very much! When it comes to the pipes, they run underground, and we are lucky to have heating cables running through the pipes so it will be quite difficult for them to get frozen (at least I hope)!
      That’s interesting about the insulation, after checking the floor of the attic, I found that it was just a light layer of sawdust and was told that was probably because at the time of insulating, it was probably the only option. my plan was to just insulate the floor of the attic with rockwool instead. I hope that won’t be a problem, but I will make sure to ask somebody who is familiar with these types of houses first.
      This month for electric, we will be paying around €900 (9000sek) so it is a little expensive at least for the first year. We have radiators on and two heat pumps that are running at full blast as it currently stands 😅
      Thank you so much for all that information that was amazing! Kiitos!

    • @perlarsson9350
      @perlarsson9350 10 месяцев назад +14

      If you go down the route of rockwool you will need to ensure that you have no air leaks coming from the living space below. Rather go with Ecofiber insulation, a cellulose based insulation. It will be better adapted for an older house since it can handle moisture better. Also it will only take one day to have the whole attic done by professionals. But fix the chimneys first!@@theNamesPhillip

    • @chrishh6077
      @chrishh6077 10 месяцев назад +9

      @@theNamesPhillip insulating a loft can be tricky business because you make the loft colder, which means moist air from the house can condense more easily on colder surfaces in the loft, and make things wet - which leads to rot. I don't think Rockwool is generally recommended in older houses, but something more breathable. You can google 'isolering i gamla hus' for more info. As someone that lived most of their life in the UK but bought a ~1900 cottage in Sweden a few years ago I am still figuring this out myself. Your cat is absolutely adorable and you definitely need to pay more cat tax in future videos :)

    • @Tzeentch_swe
      @Tzeentch_swe 10 месяцев назад +9

      No you do NOT introduce mold cuz of house "breathing". Houses doesnt "breathe" inwards.
      For every mm off isolation, the temperature decreases linear in the wall and its steeper per mm the better insulation you haver.
      Since air can hold more moist the warmer it is this can lead to kondensation in the wall if the temperature drops to much before it leaks out.
      Either you insulate what you can before kondensation occurs or you need to do as in modern houses if you want a lot of isulation(and thats a lot to do).
      Also It´s common that the old fireplace heating is replaced with electric och a heatingpump. This stops the natural airflow in the house often changeing the air prewssure från negative to positive which increases the movement of moist air out through walls, roof etc.
      When you insulate the attic you reduce the heat transfer to the attic but not the amount of moist. The attic becomes colder and the increase risk of kondesation is increased.
      You should ventilate out as much moist as you can in kitchen and bathrom and not carbonfilter fan but a real ventchannel for kitchen fan. This reduces moinst going out in the wall and helps keeping negativ preassure. This done means that you can insulate a little more.
      In the attic you need to ventilate but not ventilate too much. Moist should be able to vent out but it´s also bad to vent in too much cold air fron the outside.
      Isolation like new houses isnt possible bevuas that requires that you put a vapor barrier on the insade and have a rela ventilations system kontrolling the preassure in the house. The moist air is suppost to flow to bathroom and kitchen and be ventilatied out there so it dosent go out through the walls and roofs. You dont do that in old houses so you need to CALCULATE how much isolation you can put in the wall and attic without the risk of kondensation.
      For heating you cant use floorheating in such a old house usually. You could but it will gett expensive because the floors isnt enough isolated so you will heat under the house.
      I would:
      1. Isolat what I can without the risk of kondensation(reduce heatloss).
      2. Install a geothermal heat pump and radiators in the house with pipes. (By far the best heatingsystem. 2/3 parts of your need is form the ground and you buy only 1/3. Also on the summer for waterheater some solarpannels can supplie this)
      3. Put in a real ventilationsystem(if possible) with heat recycling. Outlets in batrooms and kitchen and inlets in bedrooms an livingsroom. (controlled airflow with mor out than in for negative preassure. Also heat recycling and you can filter out allergens/dusts etc).

    • @GunnarCreutz
      @GunnarCreutz 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@theNamesPhillip My house is built in 1907, but much smaller. The floor of the attic had sawdust insulation, but my late father insulated it with rockwool 50 years ago. I haven't had any problems with it. My outer walls are timber so there is no added insultation. This morning I had +13°C in the kitchen and -16°C outside, but I usually keep the temperature in the kitchen around +17°C. BTW, my chimney has been broken for over 50 years, so I can't use my two masonry heaters (kakelugnar).

  • @lynnemarie7885
    @lynnemarie7885 Месяц назад +40

    In case no one has mentioned it: the floors are most likely soaped floors. It‘s the traditional flooring treatment common in many places. They WILL last, and last beautifully if you take care of them with floor soap (it‘s easy by the way) Please consider not doing the linseed oil and continue the soap treatment. (We have soaped floors and they are wonderful)

    • @lassetornkvist2912
      @lassetornkvist2912 День назад

      I must say that a lot of your comments about the house are really fun to hear. Obviously you have no idea at all about how swedish old houses were built 120 years ago and how they are used today as summerhouses . You seems to compare it with what houses are today where you are coming from. And that is so out of how they should be compared. When you learned that a completely new world will open up. Good luck with your rebuilding and welcome to the swedish reality. 😊

    • @lynnemarie7885
      @lynnemarie7885 День назад +1

      @@lassetornkvist2912 um, coming from someone with a 100 year old german house with soaped floors. So yeah, I kinda do know what I am talking about 😂

    • @lassetornkvist2912
      @lassetornkvist2912 День назад

      I don't think I mentioned you in my comment. 😊
      I was reffering to what the guy was saying straight out. As a new owner to the house and presenting the building to his followers I think he perhaps should check why this house was in the order it was. It was converted to a summerhouse with a thought behind it. It was to keep the house cold in the summer, not warm in the winter.
      Therefore some of the comments was really strange. As exempel the electrical operated "weird" suncover above the window on the second floor. floor.

    • @lynnemarie7885
      @lynnemarie7885 День назад

      @@lassetornkvist2912 I think it is because you posted your comment as a reply to my mine instead of in the general comments. That's why I thought you responding DIRECTLY to me. But it's all good.

  • @MalmoG
    @MalmoG 10 месяцев назад +59

    The windows are most likely from the late 50s or early to mid 60s, judging by the fittings. Definitely not as old as the house :) Still very nice windows though, made from core wood. Just change the inner glass to a 3 or 4 mm energy efficient glass, makes a huge difference, and you can still keep the old "lively" glass on the outside. Good luck from Sweden!

  • @olsa76
    @olsa76 10 месяцев назад +55

    The totally unnecessary sun protection will make a huge difference when it gets above +27c. The best way to keep the house cool is to make sure that the sun does not reach the window.
    Tiles are the best looking option in a bathroom, but...tiles are cold to walk on in the winter even with working heating, so the only way tiles will be nice in a cold climate is to also install underfloor heating, which is also a big expense . Therefore, people also more often accept the uglier option.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +3

      Yes I can't wait to get to that temperature in the house (at least at this point with the cold)! But you're right it will probably come in handy, especially with the direction the house is pointed 🙂 I think tiles are a really lovely option and I am still leaning towards them on the walls at the very least! The floors are something I would also like tiles for but I also quite like some of the lino ones I've seen funnily enough 😅

    • @kasperkjrsgaard1447
      @kasperkjrsgaard1447 10 месяцев назад +3

      Electric underfloor heating in the bathroom isn’t that expensive.
      If there’s prepared with radiators and central heating, you could use an air to water converter and or a heat string underground, but I would presume that air to air converters would be the cheapest and easiest way to get heat into the house.

  • @angelavazquez5085
    @angelavazquez5085 10 месяцев назад +29

    The upstairs landing would make a beautiful library. Your home is so beautiful and offers so much potential!

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +6

      Thank you so much for your support, and I really love that idea, wouldn’t that be so cosy to have a library and a little reading corner! I love it!

  • @bringerod5141
    @bringerod5141 10 месяцев назад +11

    Welcome to Sweden!
    We are having one of the coldest winters in 25 years I think so I hope you stay warm! And hopefully there are no Russian attacks in the close future.
    Enjoy! Sweden is a lovely country

    • @AnniCarlsson
      @AnniCarlsson 10 месяцев назад

      28 of januari 1999 is hard to forget due to forced to do go to work. -42 it said when looked on termometer

    • @СергейСорокин-е6у3я
      @СергейСорокин-е6у3я 10 дней назад

      Смею Вас заверить- в обозримом будущем нападения России на Швецию не случится. Вооружённые силы России ударят по центрам принятия решений в США. 😊 Живите мирно...

  • @Practice_Kindness-1st
    @Practice_Kindness-1st 10 месяцев назад +10

    Your windows are mouth blown. It's a nice thing to have, and very expensive to buy new (mouth blown)...During the 19th century, craftsmen created windows and other glass products by manually spinning molten glass on a blow pipe, which produced glass with a wavy quality.
    What a beautiful cat, and your house is beautiful and full of potential. Enjoy the ride!

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +3

      Thank you! 😊 yes, we want to do everything we can to keep the windows in their original form and just restore them without ruining them, they really are amazing. we have to be a bit careful because I’ve heard that they are somewhat notorious for starting house fires (but really the house is being here for over 100 years and no house fire has happened). Yes her name is keeden and she is a very spoiled cat 😄 thank you again 😁

  • @Divig
    @Divig 10 месяцев назад +29

    Those long narrow rooms on the upper floor (walk in wardrobes, bathroom and weird guestroom) looks very similar to storage rooms we had in our house from the same period.
    They are colder than normal rooms so mice and bugs don't like them and thus fitting for storage of things and clothes/textiles. (Since you have no attic or basement meant for storage in these houses). They also act as extra insulation between the outdoors and the rooms you live in and want to warm up.

  • @MewDenise
    @MewDenise 10 месяцев назад +11

    Man.. that is my dream home. The traditional swedish house, 2 floors, symmetric.

  • @MinnewegianForever
    @MinnewegianForever 10 месяцев назад +16

    I think you got it for an excellent price. If this house was in northern Minnesota in the Grand Marais area, it would easily sell "as is" for $300,000. Grand Marais is commonly known as the "Norwegian Rivera" here in Minnesota. It has a similar climate too.
    I think it's very charming, and I would stick to fixing the major structural problems. As far as the upstairs bathroom, I would remove the bath tub and put just a toilet and a sink away from the electrical. Maybe some type of composting toilet and remove all plumbing from the upstairs. Since this is an old farmstead and doesn't have the insulation that most people are used to these days, I would make a smaller cozy living space on the bottom, and you could make some small co-working or summer sleeping areas on top.
    An outdoor sauna with an outdoor bathroom with a shower and cooking space would make it an excellent hostel place in the summer, and also pay for the extra heating and renovations to live there year round. Just my thoughts.

    • @loristromski1334
      @loristromski1334 10 месяцев назад

      I am from Wisconsin and am planning a trip to Grand Marais in February.

  • @PatrikPersson-z5d
    @PatrikPersson-z5d 10 месяцев назад +14

    The type of cast iron stove can be a really good and cheap heat source. Back in the days people picked dried pine cones from the forest floor during summer and stored in jute sacks. Once really dry the cones were used as fuel. High heat and slow burning (but a bit loud since they were crackling alot).

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +5

      Wow that is super interesting, I might just have to try that when the chimney is up and running! I love the sound of a crackling fire so as long as it doesn't get too loud, it should be lovely. Thanks for the tip!

    • @leifharmsen
      @leifharmsen 10 месяцев назад +1

      Cast iron stoves are unsafe and inefficient. When it is you having to cut haul store dry and stoke the firewood, you'll be happy for the 80+% efficiency of airtight steel over -10 to 20% efficiency of leaky brittle cast iron. Over-fire cast iron and it cracks and dumps burning coal over your floor and burns your house down. A steel stove is made of jet engine steel or something like it - you can simply shut the door and walk away from it. Plus a modern stove you can look in through the glass and see the fire burning, so pretty! I would very much doubt that you can get a cast iron stove certified. You need double insulated steel stove pipes, and they can run through existing chimneys safely without relying on the chimney being in good condition. Good modern air-tight stoves are romantic and practical, old stoves are dangerous stressful make-work projects.

    • @98Zai
      @98Zai 9 месяцев назад

      @@leifharmsen They have thermal mass though, that's the reason they're so chunky. The modern stoves are just a tiny pipe in the wall and it's basically only the fire itself that creates heat, while these big stoves will heat up the wall through the whole house. You need to know how they work, have a carbon monoxide alarm, be very diligent about the chimney etc.

  • @janeskeet3506
    @janeskeet3506 10 месяцев назад +5

    My daughter and I are currently saving up to move from the UK to Sweden so your video's are really useful for us. Thank you

    • @nespppp
      @nespppp 10 месяцев назад +2

      Keep in mind that without a proper visa, you can't move to Sweden though.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +3

      That’s great to hear and I’m glad I could be of use! If you have any questions, I can hopefully answer them in a video!

    • @janeskeet3506
      @janeskeet3506 10 месяцев назад

      @@nespppp yes, we know about visas etc thank you though

  • @jaizzj.z.3690
    @jaizzj.z.3690 5 дней назад

    Thank you so much for making this video! As a young adult it is very helpful for my understanding of the world, job& housing market to see a video where you are transparent about what costs come with a house. You have a beautiful house and magical winter around it! Wish you all the best on your new life journey! ❤❤

  • @EtherealSunset
    @EtherealSunset 10 месяцев назад +4

    Your home is going to be beautiful. Fingers crossed you get the chimneys sorted soon so you can have more heat. Candles can raise a room's temperature by a degree or two, so if you'll be in one room for a while, it might be worth lighting some. It's the flames that help, so multiple smaller candles is better than one big one. It won't make you toasty, but when it's really cold, a degree or two is noticeable warmer. If you still need to use your hands, but want s bit of extra warmth, fingerless gloves actually do make a difference. If you can get some reusable hand warmers, you can pop them in boots a bit before you plan on leaving the house as they'll warm the inside of the boot for you as boots stored in a cold room get very cold and are not pleasant to put on. Hopefully you'll have proper warmth soon though.
    Our boiler broke the other winter and the kitchen was 5°C for a few months. That was in the UK. It was pretty miserable, so I can imagine with how cold some of your house is, it must be pretty tough. The days are gradually getting longer though, so hopefully it will start to be a little less cold for you soon.

  • @Booliciously
    @Booliciously 10 месяцев назад +18

    You’re both basically living my dream. Am looking forward to your journey. I can see so much potential in those rooms and the house. My brain automatically just goes into interior decorating mode when I see a canvas with so much character and potential. Hope you guys can fix the chimneys first.

  • @Mustangmom2k
    @Mustangmom2k 10 месяцев назад +5

    I'm American with Swedish ancestry and I visited Sweden recently to meet some relatives. It's a beautiful country and your property is stunning! I would fix the chimneys and insulate the house first. For the windows, you could easily build cheap wood frames to fit up against the windows, staple clear plastic film to the frames, then set them into the openings for temporary extra window insulation. Then take them down in summer. Not ideal, but helps to insulate the glass a bit more and stop drafts until you can replace the windows. For the bathroom with the electrics, it's easier to move a bath tub than a fuse panel. See if you can relocate the tub. As for the AC units high up on the walls (here, we call them mini-split units), do yours not also have heat? Ours usually have both AC and heat. Maybe you could replace your wall units with dual function units. Not cheap, I suspect, but you would have more even/consistent heat. I'm looking forward to seeing your progress!

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +2

      Oh that's awesome and thank you so much! Where in the US are you from? I've heard a lot of people with Swedish ancestry are based in Minnesota. That's actually a really out of the box answer and is super interesting, thank you! There is a service here that actually coats glass windows in a layer of plastic film and apparently it is amazing for keeping in heat.
      Yeah the tub definitely needs to be the one to move, I can't even imagine the stress with the electrics! and our units are actually heaters and AC but I think our insulation is so bad in the attic that all the heat is escaping! Thanks so much for the support and the feedback, I will do my best to share good content!

    • @Mustangmom2k
      @Mustangmom2k 10 месяцев назад +1

      @theNamesPhillip I'm originally from California, but have lived in Virginia for 32 years. My great-grandparents immigrated in 1910 and went to Nebraaska, then to Illinois, and eventually, California. Yes, there's a very large Swedish population in Minnesota, but my family never settled there. My Swedish relatives are currently scattered throughout Värmland and Hälsingland areas. As for your attic, I guess you should add that to the list!

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +2

      Oh that’s super interesting I love how much investment you have and finding out where your ancestors are from! Yes Värmland is the area that I live, a beautiful part of Sweden 😁
      Oh absolutely, the floor of the attic is actually only insulated with a thin layer of sawdust so that is probably one of the first things that needs to be changed, all of my heat is escaping from the attic!

  • @ncopeman
    @ncopeman 10 месяцев назад +18

    I’m another muppet from England who bought a house in Sweden. I use it over Christmas and summer. We’ve had it in the family since 2007 and I bought out the family in 2019. It’s near Kramfors up north and next to a train line 🤣. Keeping it warm in the winter is an absolute pain. I’ve decided to rip out the old boiler and go for ground source heat pump. It’ll be expensive but worth it in the end.

  • @jauhis96
    @jauhis96 9 месяцев назад +2

    Greetings from Finland! 🇫🇮As you will be fixing up the chimneys and roof, I highly recommend building a wood heated sauna indoors as a addition to bathroom if possible. It takes up a bit of space, but it also heats the house when used. I wish you a happy year 2024!

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  9 месяцев назад +1

      Hello! Thanks for the suggestion! Merja is Finnish so I don’t think we can go too long without a sauna 😂 Sauna is actually quite a big part of our lives, so we will be getting one at some point, the question would be whether it should be inside or outside is one we need to think of, especially when the chimneys get fixed the whole house should be really easy to keep warm! Thank you so much I wish you a happy 2024 as well! 😁

  • @LILY-os1vo
    @LILY-os1vo 10 месяцев назад +3

    Well as a person who just finished changing the whole electricity system of my new house, I guarantee with you that it is totally worth it (find joy through challenges i suppose)
    Your electricity box looks exactly like mine, with old button and to be honest at first I did not want to do it at all. But once we renovate, we want to do it good, also electricity box inside a bathroom is not really a safe idea.
    When I change my electricity system, I also change the location of my electricity box as well. It is a hassle yes, but good for your safety and the quality of your home
    Take your sweet time, feel your house and you will know what need to be done ❤

    • @LILY-os1vo
      @LILY-os1vo 10 месяцев назад

      In your bathroom with electricity box i would like to propose 2 recommendations:
      1. If You choose to keep all the electricity the way it is, then I recommend to build an isolated wall and then after that will be the bathroom => but it also means you need to change and adjust the water / waste pipes of wc => take a look closer to see what is better
      2. You can change the whole new electricity system of the house , which also means you are able to move your electricity box in any places of your choice (I choose to do this option in my home). Then you have new electricity system, same bathroom system no need to move / adjust water / waste pipe + safe home

  • @target844
    @target844 10 месяцев назад +8

    The walk-in closet was likely never built to be warm. It is not uncommon in old Swedish houses to have cold spaces like that. If the roof ends below the ceiling height of the upper floor there will be some part of the room that do not have ceiling height. It was not uncommon to have a wall where it is possible to have full height, which results in some space like where your walk closet is. That storage was often not heated and therefore not insulated from the outside, insulation would have been put in the floor and the doors made to handle the temperature diffrence. If the storage is not something you need every day the low temperature is not a problem. If the house is heated it will likely never be below freeing.
    In the house where one pair of my grandparents lived there is three storage accessible from the inside, the house if from the 1920s.
    Where my other grandparents lived full length of the house on the second level at the backside is a long uninsulated space, there is a couple of cm gap between the wall and the roof. It is on the north side of the house and keeps quite cool in the summer, my mother used to sleep there in the summer. It was also used for drying washing if it could not be done outside. It was alos used for storage. One of these spaces like that on the front side is completely inaccessible, you would need to climb over the insulation in the attic to get there, It has a window for the look with a curtain that has been there for decades. The house is from 1930 but was rebuilt in 1950.
    The awning outside the bedroom is not useless, it is a very efficient way to keep the bedroom cooler by blocking direct sunlight but still letting light into the room. They are more efficient in keeping heat out compared to blinds or curtains because the fabric that is heated is away from the house, not in or behind the windows like the alternatives.
    It is not uncommon that power warrants like that have sun, wind, and rain sensors to automatically deeply and retract it. You can cool the house with the air heat pump but it is likely quite a new addition the the house. I use awnings like that every summer and I live 700km north of you. They are called "markiser" in Swedish and I would consider getting more of them for the larger windows on the ground floor depending on the orientation of the house and how warm it gets inside. They are not very good-looking when deployed but are quite invisible when not in use
    The small side extension i what sometimes is called a svale or förstuga (lobby in English). An uninsulated space with doors to the inside and the outside. The advantage is to reduce airflow tot he the outside when you enter and exit the house. It is also a place to take off and leave your dirty shoes and other clothes to keep water, mud, and snow away from the inside of the house. In North America, it is called a mudroom. Consider keeping it for that purpose, do not try to make it a warm room or tear it down unless you you tried to use it for at least a year and do not like it. Fix the internal with some benches to sit to put on boots on and appropriate storage for clothes and shoes. The room before it where the cushion blocks the cat flap could be a place to keep jackets etc in the winter, there is not a lot of storage space in the main entrance. I think it is a more useful entrance than the main entrance for a large part of the year and makes it easier to keep the living space clean.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +3

      Wow, what an amazing amount of information. Thank you so much for taking that time!
      That is really interesting about those two little rooms, I did wonder why one of them looked so finished but so supposedly an insulated. This is, in fact the second comment to say the same thing I had no idea it was by design.
      And the same thing with the markiser! I thought it would come in handy, but I thought also that it was funny that it was powered by electric, it just seems so strange in a very old home 😅 But so many people have told me how useful they are that I can’t wait to see in the summer! In England, I never saw them so it’s completely new to me!
      I will give the side room a try, they definitely would be some value in using it as a mudroom for sure. Part of me was hoping to be able to take it down and replace it with a shelter for the car doing the snow season (way down in the priority list though)
      Again, thank you so much for the amazing amount of information, both of us are very new to owning a house and really want to learn!

  • @henriklarsson5221
    @henriklarsson5221 10 месяцев назад +6

    Just a note for people who are looking, you can find houses in the south of Sweden for decent prices, especially in old summer-house areas. My house(fully renovated) cost 950 k swedish kr, 60 m2 and 2000 m2 garden, more then enough for two people, i added some work for 100 k to make it my own. 20 minutes from Lund and 30 from Malmö. No road-sounds nor trainsounds, fiber water waste included. Sure if you are looking for a bigger house then it will be harder, but in the north of Scania and Småland there are a lot of cheap places that are bigger , but for me : larger house = more work.
    cheers

    • @y.john.
      @y.john. 9 месяцев назад

      How and where should I look to find the houses you are referring to? Do you have a website or a real estate agent to give me ?

    • @henriklarsson5221
      @henriklarsson5221 9 месяцев назад

      @@y.john. "Hemnet".se is the page for you, i think your webbrowser can translate to english. Then do a search for Example "Skåne", if that is your area of interest, select only "villa" and "Fritidsboende"(summer house) and set your maximum price. I did a fast search and found many around 1-1,5 million SKR(~100-150k dollars) in areas that are "close" to towns but still in the country-side, or in small villages. The closer you get to the west-coast, the more expensive in general. Same goes of course for other larger city-areas. Småland is know for having many cheap houses for sale, but then it would be longer to "big civ". cheers

    • @henriklarsson5221
      @henriklarsson5221 9 месяцев назад

      @@y.john.
      Swedish English
      Till salu - For Sale
      Kommande - Upcoming
      Slutpriser - Final prices
      Sök Mäklare - Find Broker
      Hitta bostäder till salu -Find properties for sale

    • @henriklarsson5221
      @henriklarsson5221 9 месяцев назад

      @@y.john. Swedish English
      Villor - Villa
      Radhus - Terraced house
      Lägenheter - Apartments
      Fritidsboenden - Summer House
      Tomter - Plot
      Gårdar/Skogar - Farm land/ Forest
      Övrigt - Others

  • @hzpc
    @hzpc 10 месяцев назад +11

    I came across this video via Facebook, and I'm glad it was shown to me! It's such a nice video highlighting the pros and cons.
    Your honesty and realism when you're showing around the house are very helpful for someone thinking of making a similar move.
    And ofcourse, props to the camera and edit work, looks really clean!
    Best of luck on your adventure, I'm sure it will turn out to be a beautiful, cosy and warm home. ❤

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +5

      Thank you so much! I’m glad I was able to be of value and I hope to continue with that! Thanks for your support! 😁

  • @joannamallory2823
    @joannamallory2823 10 месяцев назад +3

    I grew up in Alaska. We were remote as well. We had freezers in our downstairs area for meat and cheese since we bought in bulk and my dad hunted moose and deer, and was a fisherman. They are beneficial.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +1

      Definitely, good point! I could see them being super useful when I start getting to know some of the hunters in the area!

  • @lewiskinser8320
    @lewiskinser8320 10 месяцев назад +3

    It is going to be a beautiful home bro. Ur on ur way up. Love the fact u call ur woodworking projects thing 1 thru 6. Funny as hell man. I hope to meet ur neighbors and town folk close by in future episodes. Thanks for content

  • @benjaming9912
    @benjaming9912 10 месяцев назад +2

    seeing that spinning bike in the living room unlocked some childhood memories lol. my parents bought a cabin in sweden when I was 8 or 9. no running water, no electricity. we spent the entire first summer renovating the cabin and my dad installed some solar panels. but in the winter we barely got any sun so by 2pm we had to generate electricity in a different way: my dad and I had built a spinning bike that generated electricity. so every day we had to take turns on the bike so that we’d still have electricity for lights etc in the afternoons and evenings. i hated it at times but at least it kept us warm haha. sadly the cabin burnt down 4 years later :( we suspect it was set on fire because it was also regularly broken into and vandalized whenever we weren’t there.

  • @margoz7251
    @margoz7251 10 месяцев назад +3

    Welp, you won't be bored!! One of those odd downstairs rooms would benefit from a greenhouse bumpout and a passive solar heat system. And a floor drain. If you're going to grow some of your food supply it will be an important way to extend your grow season.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +1

      Haha yes you can say that again 😅 Merja hasn’t read this comment, but I’m certain that she agrees there! Our closest Neighbour just got solar panels so it will definitely be cool to see how well they work for him

  • @LynnBFoster
    @LynnBFoster 10 месяцев назад +12

    Just stumbled on your channel. I’m watching from North Carolina USA and love watching European home renovations. Can’t wait to get caught up.

  • @ShazWag
    @ShazWag 10 месяцев назад +29

    Love how much potential it has, and with a fridge the size of a room! *"COLD"* was the most frequently used word throughout the video 🥶❄🤣

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +7

      I love the positive vibes thanks so much! Haha yes cold was all I could feel that day! 😅 thankfully it is only -3° today but next week it goes back to -24°c ⛄️

    • @ShazWag
      @ShazWag 10 месяцев назад

      Just be glad you're not a brass monkey 😄@@theNamesPhillip

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +1

      😂

    • @berndhoffmann7703
      @berndhoffmann7703 10 месяцев назад +1

      I love cold rooms as well, but one should have 15 degrees Celsius minimum inside in order to avoid damage to the structure. You need up to your heat some more degrees :)

    • @karinholm5403
      @karinholm5403 10 месяцев назад

      There is a danish invention that can help against moisture damage. It is called solarvent and heats and dries the air when the sun is shining. Not expensive and only use solar energy when active.@@berndhoffmann7703

  • @NordVast
    @NordVast 10 месяцев назад +3

    As someone commented. Insulate it to much is not a good idea. But for energy savings, replace the windows with modern three glass windows will save a lot of energy. You can get those in a style that will fit the house. Another thing people do that living in big old houses is that they in the winter don't heat all the rooms they don't need as much. Just enough to keep the house in a good shape. The most important thing also with an old house is to have a good roof, you don't want any leaks.

    • @llaeeZ
      @llaeeZ 10 месяцев назад +1

      It's often possible to install a third pane in existing windows. So that should be the first option.

  • @davemcdonald5004
    @davemcdonald5004 10 месяцев назад +1

    what a beautiful home make do and adjust chimneys first and stay away from high debt cheers from canada

  • @Brett1279
    @Brett1279 10 месяцев назад +4

    The house is amazing and in a beautiful setting.
    I moved from England last month and now live in Motala, just bought a house and trying my hand at DIY also.
    Good luck

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +1

      Oh awesome, exciting times! Good luck to you as well with your build!

    • @Brett1279
      @Brett1279 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@theNamesPhillip thanks mate - I’ve dropped you a message in IG also. Looking forward to seeing your progress and your carpentry skills 👍🏻

  • @weezyduffy
    @weezyduffy 10 месяцев назад +10

    Just found your channel and loving the house content! We moved from the UK two years ago to northern Sweden (near Skellefteå). We bought a house last summer in the forest and are also discovering all the things that need repaired etc! First things on our list were having a new fire installed, the chimney inspected and then new heating! It’s been an expensive year, haha!
    Looking forward to more content! :)

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +5

      Haha it will be so worth it to have a working fire to cozy up by though, especially in Skellefteå where you have a whole new definition of cold! Thanks so much for your support and I super glad that you have managed to get out there and start living your dreams!

  • @seanbyrne8766
    @seanbyrne8766 10 месяцев назад +10

    I recently travelled to Sweden and definitely would consider it to make my own self sufficient home, so I am interested to see how this develops to a self sufficient home! Definitely need to insulate the house..

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +1

      Oh that’s awesome where did you travel in Sweden? Thanks for the feedback and yeah absolutely! I don’t think I can go another year with this cold!!! 😂

  • @Caprifool
    @Caprifool 9 месяцев назад +1

    Lots of people over insulate their old houses in Sweden. Blocking the original air intakes and chimneys, that were the original ventilation. Resulting in overheating and mould. Maybe hold that thought until you have the chimney cleared and all the fireplaces lit all day. As well as 20-30 m³ DRY firewood, times two for next season. I've lived in a similar house for 15 years. And got the same advice myself. Which saved a LOT of money!

  • @EthanFromLondon
    @EthanFromLondon 10 месяцев назад +1

    I also bought a house in Sweden in the middle of nowhere (probably somewhere close to you) and going through similar experiences as yours. The electrics in the bathroom can stay there as long as you can seal the door to ensure no moisture goes into the cabinet. There should be no risk as long as your water pipes are not coming through there as well. The first floor landing could be a nice reading room. To heat the house buy oil / gel filled radiators from Jula up to 800W each and attach them around the rooms where you need heating. Don't use panel radiators they are cheaper, but useless (I bought 4 and regretted it) and consume more electricity. I changed my bathroom completely, but had it done by professionals due to the reasons you explained and it was very expensive SEK 150K . But don't use tiles since the houses expand and contract and it's better to have the rubber matts / carpets. The chimneys can be fixed by putting flexible metal pipes with insulation around them and then connecting them to each fireplace. Once you have been there for 6 months or more it will become and home and you will love it as I love my place now.

  • @annfrank411
    @annfrank411 10 месяцев назад +5

    Such a beautiful house congratulations.
    First you have to make sure that chimneys are sorted, once that’s in place on professional person is working on it start working on insulating the entire house any gaps, nooks, corners pipes have good insulation make sure windows are a good quality ( double glazing (unfortunately plastic are best for winters of such magnitude)) so no cold seep true them.
    Once this things are done and entire house is sealed you can change inside don’t rush you don’t want to skip something and have to re do again waste of money and time.
    Try to make a kitchen, one bathroom living room and bedroom to be comfortable for next winter coming then slowly make a room at the time, but make sure you do the first steps properly as they are the most expensive and important.
    Good luck I bet you will make a beautiful improvements in that house.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks so much! And yes great advice and good prioritisation. I want to do as much as I can to keep the original windows if possible so hopefully I can restore them and treat them but if not, plastic might be the way to go!
      Thanks for the tips!

  • @mikaelmartin9288
    @mikaelmartin9288 10 месяцев назад +3

    Your house tour reminded me what Swedes us to say about British plumning, like its better to mount water pipes on the outside of the house in order to easier repair them when they freeze 😊😂. You should defenately spend some more money on electricity and heat up your house more until the chimney is repaired. Espessially important of course in bathrooms and kitchen where you have water. I also suggest as soon as you get warmer in the house to crawl under the house and look for water leaks. And if so, turn of the water until you have repaired potential leaks. Regarding bathrooms in Sweden, i dont agree they are built or renovated cheap. Most go for floor heating, tiles on floors and walls and nice glas showwer walls and fancy bath tubs. The small corner rooms in houses like your were often calles kattwind, a place for storage and funcioned as a climate buffer between outside and living spaces. For a coming renovation you need to insulate walls and ceilingns as well as replacing the windows to 3-glase windows. The price you have paid for such a house is a barging. Same house around Gothenburg would probably be 3-4 times higher, and around Stockholm even much more. But with a million SEK spend you will still have very much house for the money 😊 Put up the heat and good luck. 👍

  • @justatitle
    @justatitle 10 месяцев назад +3

    Beautiful House, but really, I think ? it should be taken down to the studs. Insulated, re wired, re plumbed, and tear down some walls, to open up rooms that have no purpose, then update your fireplace, and chimney, then add efficient wood stoves.
    Start at one end of the house, so you can still live there if possible.
    Have an overall plan! And stick to it.
    I would look under the ceiling panels in your primary room, ie master bedroom just to see what’s up there underneath. I wonder if you have insulation?
    I’m not sure what you can afford, but your house would warrant putting big money into it.
    Are you handy?

  • @leifharmsen
    @leifharmsen 10 месяцев назад +4

    Using the chimneys for heat means you need air-tight modern wood burning appliances, so that requires modern double-insulated smoke pipes and caps - these can be run inside your existing chimneys. Fireplaces are relatively useless for heating - they suck more heat out than they provide. You will also need one or two good battery powered saws (mine are Stihl) and a 20 ton splitter. In Canada we have very good and inexpensive wood stove companies, and I suspect that Sweden/Europe does too.

    • @zingzing6550
      @zingzing6550 10 месяцев назад +2

      Ehhh...what? If you pipe the chimneys they will be useless for heating the house. The whole idea is to heat up the whole chimney (quite a large mass) and that will keep the house warm overnight. It has worked fine since 1904 and will work just fine another century or two. This was the conventional way to heat houses in Sweden up to the introduction of cheap electricity.

  • @katealison6087
    @katealison6087 10 месяцев назад +5

    The house is gorgeous - so much potential and in such a great location. A suggestion for the front space (the one where you mentioned about the old glass in the windows) is that you make it a library/reading nook? You could pop bookshelves a couple of comfy armchairs in there. I was also thinking the same for the large landing space upstairs. A couple of chairs, some bookshelves and some low tables with lamps on would look great. The lamp idea would also work really well in your living room to bring the space together and cosy it up. Lamps create that lovely cosy feeling - with softer light and they are also lovely design features if you choose them carefully. Personally I prefer lamplight over central ceiling lights any day. The house is so exciting and looking forward to see how you develop it. Can relate to the old house problems - water, heating etc. I've got an 18th century cottage in Cornwall and boy has it been a labour of love - lots of tears along the way too! But living somewhere with character and history is so interesting.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you so much! That’s interesting, they in the landing space. I would like a room like that, too relax with (I just need to get books and replace my Kindle) 😅. It would also be nice to have an old vinyl player in there!
      Oh wow, that’s amazing! I love Cornwall, I’m originally from Bristol so it’s not all that far away! Yeah, the sentimental value is worth it, I think!
      Thanks so much for your advice and positivity , I’ll try my hardest to give the best updates 😁

  • @tigreygt6614
    @tigreygt6614 9 месяцев назад +3

    Hello Philip and your partner. Congratulations on your purchase of a home. Am an African from Uganda, living in the United States of America. I love your humor 😂 as you show us around your home, namely the murder door. That got me scared for you, especially at night. Imagine if you are home alone at night 😢. The second hilarious thing you said was that room where all plants go to die😂! Your partner is going to twist your arms on that.
    Otherwise, I think your purchase is great, but for me I would work hard to create a modern look in the house. I don't like the cabinets, the pantry and of course those red stairs. And as an African, of course I hate the cold weather. I like the secluded environment though.
    Once again, congratulations 👏

  • @timmymendenhall1275
    @timmymendenhall1275 10 месяцев назад +2

    Loved your video. Love the house. Praying you get the chimneys working really soon. Glad you guys love the house. Make sure all the plumbing is protected from the cold of course. I am in Texas, USA so your land and snow are absolutely beautiful to me !! Also the price of that house is extremely cheap. Keep us posted.....

  • @andreacleghorn479
    @andreacleghorn479 10 месяцев назад +3

    I just happened upon this, and I think the house is great! Can just imagine it in the summer, so airy and light. I guess a mason to reconstruct the chimneys is the first thing that needs to happen. Will be checking in later. Need to thaw out a little after watching!

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you so much! Yes, that will definitely be the first thing on the list, because with the way these houses were built, they need the chimney to be working! Haha yes you unfreeze yourself a little, I’ll try to make more content that will have you stuck to your seat 😁

  • @greham
    @greham 10 месяцев назад +2

    If you can't insulate, just start putting wall hangings and carpets everywhere. That'll help a lot. Also, get a air dryer to remove extra humidity and feel warmer.

  • @NorseHorseDecor
    @NorseHorseDecor 10 месяцев назад +3

    This s my dream too! My Swedish friend (also a RUclipsr) has just bought a summerhouse near Sala and it needs a lot of work. I’m going to visit in the summer and I can’t wait! . Currently it’s as cold as yours though. Good luck with your project, I look forward to following your progress.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +2

      Oh that’s amazing that sounds super exciting! Summers in Sweden are unbelievable so you won’t be disappointed! And that’s an area that doesn’t get too extreme, you get perfect four seasons

  • @TorbenS
    @TorbenS 10 месяцев назад +2

    I stumbled over your video in my feed, I couldn't resist to look in.
    I'm a Danish guy and I live in the southern region of Denmark like 15 min. drive north of the German border.
    Your new home reminds me on "Emil fra Lønneberg". I'm sure you will get a nice and cozy home, once you get those chimneys fixed and can hold a normal indoor temperature.
    As others mentions the pipes with running water should be protected to not get freeze, so remove water where you can, to limit the risks for or broken pipe.
    I agree that having the fuses in the bathroom is quite weird, so maybe you could make like a walk-in cabinet in front, for towels and stuff and simply make the room shorter. This might however become difficult due to the way pipes are running, so maybe move the entire bathroom to another place in the first floor, because you wouldn't like to not have a toilet on that floor.

  • @Waltazhaar
    @Waltazhaar 10 месяцев назад +2

    About the junction box behind the wall/door in the bathroom. If you don't intend to have an RCD installed (which may or may not require a lot of work depending on the current installation) , then to be safe, move the bathtub and shower head to another place in the room. Or simply remove the shower head and make it so you can't spray water anywhere. Meaning make it an "bathe only" bathtub. However in my honest opinion,
    I seriously recommend having every bathroom protected by a RCD. As the electrical installation probably is older than when the rules for when and where to have a RCD, were implemented, it might be that you're not forced to change current installation by law, but it wouldn't hurt. 👍🏻

  • @bjornjensen3382
    @bjornjensen3382 10 месяцев назад +3

    Hi there. Just found your page. My family and I live in the south of Sweden and we used to live in Härjedalen.
    It looks like you guys doesn’t know that much about houses and Swedish houses 😅
    That old house are warmed up by wood fireplaces and typical for that age. During a period when electricity cheap many old houses put electric heaters in to, but it’s very good for the house to have the chimney stock warm during the winter as much as possible.
    Then the last 20 years many with electric heaters changed to pumps air to air or put water heating system in and now warms it with “bergvärme pump, jordvärme pump or luft/vatten pump.
    What’s your plan to heat the house?
    Some good luftvärmepumps can easy work there or pelletsbrännare/kamin/panna. We had that in the North. Very effective heaters!
    But!! Don’t let the house stand so cold for longer times. The condensation and moist will eat it up from inside out!
    I have a friend with an old house and he used ceramic heatfans in the rooms during renovation. Very effective 👍🏻

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +2

      Haha yes, you are very right! I’ve only lived in English houses and although Merja is Swedish and has lived in Haparanda, she has really lived in apartments. 😅
      Oh that’s really interesting information to know thanks! We aren’t entirely sure yet to be honest, we’d love to get the chimneys working so that we could have heat from the fireplace and have the warm air circulate under the house as well. I do think the house is able to have bergvärme installed and depending on how expensive that would turn out to be, it could be a great option!
      I feel that the air heating pumps would work really well if the floor of the attic was insulated properly. at the moment, it’s only insulated with a thin layer of sawdust so all the heat is escaping through the roof.
      Yeah, that’s definitely, not what I want, I will need to go out and get more heaters 😂 thanks so much for your help, that’s a lot of good advice!

    • @bjornjensen3382
      @bjornjensen3382 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@theNamesPhillip as mentioned here to ventilation is very very important. My house is from 1917 and we put in waterbased heating system. We also have installed modern ventilation valves in every room and extra insulation on walls. Old houses have ”självdrag” and bread true the walls and ventilation. I guess to ask professionals will gain you. Ventilation is as important to.
      Feel free to ask. I work in the construction industry. I can guide you a little. I guess there are many pages and RUclips pages for DIY old houses.

    • @karilang9377
      @karilang9377 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@theNamesPhillip never heard Merja as a Swede but normally a Finn

  • @trudiegordon6327
    @trudiegordon6327 9 месяцев назад +2

    Fireplaces add character and I would get on with getting them working and any source of heat put on. Piles of wood by the fires look cosy and bigger warm rugs and throws make a difference as would curtains to keep in warmth or shutters. Candles and sconces on the wall give warmth. The kitchen cabinets could be painted and some people cut hearts out to make it look more rustic. A big kitchen table and chairs is needed and some copper pans.

  • @tormodnordskog7702
    @tormodnordskog7702 10 месяцев назад +10

    Hello ! Cozy house. I see that you have single-layer windows, before it was very common to insert a layer of windows on the inside of these you have here. See if you can find any extra windows you can put in, you will notice a lot about the warmth and coziness in the home. Good luck with the house.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +3

      Thank you so much! I just checked back in the video and although it looks like they’re single pane windows, there are actually two layers on all the windows in the house. What I notice is that there is a draft coming from the edges of the glass, so I definitely need to fix that!

    • @KimmoJaskari
      @KimmoJaskari 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@theNamesPhillip Other options that can help - insulated curtains, and 3M makes an insulating window film you attach to the inside window frame. The objective being trapping air between the inside and outside.

    • @igeekling
      @igeekling 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@theNamesPhillipthat kind of windows you traditionally put something called 'fönstervadd' between the panes as part of winterizing.
      Partly for decorations.
      But mainly as an old way to keep the cold draft from the window down during the cold months.
      How effective it is compared to modern methods is debatable.
      But it might help a little and it is the traditional look. If you're going for that feel of the rooms.
      Especially if you stick some 'eterneller' (dried flowers) into the fönstervadd

  • @v.h.7180
    @v.h.7180 10 месяцев назад +6

    Just found your channel. Love the cat, the house and your genuine personality. Anything what you and Maria want to post will be interesting. Owning a large house is like a never ending journey.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks so much! If you ever want to see something specific just reach out! Until then I will try to bring the best quality I can to you!

  • @PatrickQT
    @PatrickQT 10 месяцев назад +14

    Ok so you basically have better internet in the swedish wilderness than in major german cities... got it.

  • @PhilipPress-l8m
    @PhilipPress-l8m 10 месяцев назад +1

    Congratulations on your property purchase. It reminds me of the house our eldest daughter and son-in-law bought. There was so much wrong with it that my SIL, who is very handy with repairs, spent much time and money fixing. After substantial updates had begun, our daughter realized the original layout didn't work for them. They restarted with a clean-sheet CAD as-built of the house and developed three new workable layouts for the space. Their place originally was like yours, with the "what good is this room?" comments, but after redesign they loved it. Making sense of the layout probably doubled the property value as well making them happy.
    Whatever you do, good luck.

  • @kirstenaas4450
    @kirstenaas4450 10 месяцев назад +3

    Windows from before ww2 (at least) were only 1layer glass. Then they often had another frame with glass to put up in the winter, you might find some in the basement or attic. You need to make a small "artic entrance" on the outside, this will help you to not to drain a lot of heat from the rest of the house. Looks like they have removed a lot of doors from earlier days. My grandma always used to heat a brick of soapstone, out it in a multi layerd textile (cotton) bag and put in the bed (with down and wool - syntetic will not do. I still feel good with a cold temp in my bedroom. Do not try to make yiur beutiful house a picture of modern floorplans and colors. See what you can find from its original designs. Happy work and results from Norway

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks a lot for that. Super interesting information! I definitely don’t plan on modernising the house, we both really like the older styles and it really would be a shame if we decided to ruin the structure after 100 years of good foundations!
      The wool idea is a good one, I wonder if Merja would be angry if I used her knitting stash alpaca wool 😂
      Thanks so much for your support and great tips !

    • @kirstenaas4450
      @kirstenaas4450 10 месяцев назад +1

      Alpaca is the super wool. And it do not ich. A pair of socks from this will help you keep warm. I am looking forward to see more from your projects. Best of luck for you both.

  • @Theleisureexpert
    @Theleisureexpert 10 месяцев назад +3

    Really nice house. Bit of advice start working from” outside” in. We use to say ( property developer) get the envelope of the house right. Insulate, get walls sorted, get roof and foundation sorted. It cost money and you do not see much of it but once done properly it will be right for a very long time. Than concentrate on electric and plumbing. Get your floorplan right and plan essentials like bathroom and kitchen. Make a plan, very detailed and stick to it.
    All the best and enjoy the journey of renovating. I will be watching and hopefully can give some advice.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +1

      That is definitely the most logical way to do things, thank you so much! Due to the cold, we are definitely okay, not being able to see the renovations that we make so long as they are functional 😂 thanks so much for your feedback and support!

  • @lydon1200
    @lydon1200 10 месяцев назад +6

    I'm so glad I found your channel !!! What a beautiful house . I'm excited to see the changes you make. I can't wait to see the chimney situation repaired - I'm cold for you 🙂

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you so much I’m glad you liked the video! Believe me, I can’t wait either and I’m hoping that being so cold this year will make me even more thankful for the warmth next, use it as a way to build thicker skin!

  • @millwoodthomas5220
    @millwoodthomas5220 10 месяцев назад +5

    I can't fathom the temperatures. I live in Australia and we are in the middle of a heatwave (40 plus degrees), which is basically like living on the sun. I can't wait to follow your progress. Your house is amazing.
    You might want to check out a RUclipsr: 'roaming wild Rosie', she's doing similar to you and she knew nothing in the beginning also.
    good luck!

    • @zoom5024
      @zoom5024 10 месяцев назад +2

      For us it's the other way around. When the heatwaves comes in Sweden during the summers and it's around 30 degrees Celsius in the shade i wanna cry. We dont have houses and apartments ment for the heat. I live in the top floor of an apartment which have sun from morning to night, i had to sit in just underwear and couldnt have the PC on during the day, had to jump in the shower like 5 times a day just to cool off 😂

  • @susanne4028
    @susanne4028 10 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you for showing us around. That was really interesting. I wish you good luck with all the renovations.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад

      Thank you Susanne 🙏I will make sure to keep posting updates so pop by again if you’re feeling curious 😁

  • @brioshoveit
    @brioshoveit 10 месяцев назад +2

    A bit of feedback.
    You both have some work to do, but I bet it will be great in end.
    Attic, 500- 600 mm loose woodinsulation (total, can still use the old). Vents to move condensation. Cost repaid in 5-10 years.
    Bugnets to avoid getting hornets on addict.
    Pax eos 100h in downstairs bathroom, it is a ftx vent that uses bad air to preheat fresh incoming air. Cost 11 k sek + installation of duct to areas that need the heat.
    Redraw entire electrical system, looked like a rats nest.
    Air to air or air to water heater, but as it is lacking the pipes, I would go for air to air.
    Remodel upper bathroom to a toilet to lessen cost.
    Bedroom, looked like egg tempera paint, so check that up, as it can flake if use other paint.

  • @jmfs8738
    @jmfs8738 29 дней назад

    Your home is beautiful and you’re so fortunate! I hope you enjoy what it offers while you chip away at the updates you want. Looks like the big need is the chimney/heat situation. After that, it’s all appearances. Q - Are big plastic sheets available to internally cover/seal your windows? Also, I use an electric space heater to warm a room at a time in winter months. It saves on oil heat costs, which I know needs converting. Q - Is that an option for you? Best wishes!

  • @thegirlwithbrighteyes2453
    @thegirlwithbrighteyes2453 9 месяцев назад +1

    We've got an old house, too, although smaller than yours, so I just thought I'd add my two cents. You've had some really good comments with advice already!
    In our house we've got something that I can't recommend enough - it's a cast iron stove in the kitchen (kökspanna) that is connected to a system with cast iron radiators. It's extremely effective in warming the house and it doesn't take a lot of wood either, the exposed pipes go around the house to almost every room. I love them, they belong in an old house. I'm sure you could install something similar once you've got your cast iron stove working - or even better if you've got the possibility to add a Swedish tiled oven (kakelugn) that would be an amazing heat source that could heat the whole house if connected to a radiator system.
    We do have one heatpump in our house - just the one since our house is just 80kvm - but it's an IVT Aero and it's been working so well for us. It's not very expensive to run and it helps maintain the heat for a longer time every time we heat the house with wood. Note that we don't have any doors - they were removed by a previous owner and since the house is so small it makes perfect sense so we haven't put them back.
    About insulation. I know some people here are telling you not to insulate an old house - but you definitely can if you do it right. What you need is an insulation that doesn't retain moisture, because glass wool needs a lot of plastic around it, otherwise it sucks it up like a sponge. You don't want that kind of plastic or mould sponge in your house. Instead, go for three things:
    1. Paper the walls. It might sound crazy but it acts like a windbreaker and wind is what will really chill your old house down. Just regular målarpapp works well, some types of wallpaper as well - just make sure it's not plasticky.
    2. Use insulation like woodchip (like Hunton träfiberisolering, probably the most cost effective one) or linen wool. These insulations don't retain moisture and lets the house breathe.
    3. Don't use a vapor barrier (ångspärr) - what you need is instead a vapor breaker (ångbroms). They are very expensive, I know, but unfortunately using a modern ångspärr in an old house is not a good idea since you will never get it completely airtight (and you probably don't want to, either, because the house was never meant to have that).
    Other than this, paper tape (målartejp) is your friend. You can use it wherever you find a draft and it will make a surprising difference, really. Just keep an eye on whether the upstairs retains heat much better than the downstairs, because that means you probably overdid it upstairs. ;) Good luck!
    (Oh and I just thought of one more thing - we've had problems with humidity in our house, it gets incredibly dry in the winter so I'd recommend getting some kind of humidity sensors to keep an eye on that.)

  • @SCOOPER3896
    @SCOOPER3896 10 месяцев назад +2

    The first thing you need to do is get the chimneys fixed so you can get some heat in the house and be able to use the kitchen stove.
    The house has tremendous potential but I think it might cost you a fair bit of money even if you try to do a lot of the work yourself.
    I'm really looking forward to the future vids in this series to see what you do to the house.
    Good luck.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, I think you’re probably right there, A lot of the really important stuff I will definitely handover to the professionals but where it makes sense for me to do things myself and the risks aren’t too high. I will definitely do them. I believe the chimney is built in such a way with these really old houses that he is meant to circulate underneath the house so that will help a lot!
      Thanks so much for your advice and support, I’ll try to bring the best content I can!

  • @victoriajohansson7669
    @victoriajohansson7669 10 месяцев назад +1

    If thats the original windows, looks like you are missing the Innanfönster that should be added when the temp drops. Maybe there is a set of them in the attic?

  • @jennifercesario9238
    @jennifercesario9238 4 месяца назад +2

    I love the "murder door" and windows with "mini skirts" 😅. Honestly though, this home is beautiful, and has so much potential!

  • @agoogleuser1261
    @agoogleuser1261 10 месяцев назад +2

    interesting the things you find hideous in your home, people pay good money to install (real hardwood flooring, wood plank (shiplap) ceiling, fitted kitchen, and a stand alone freezer). From my perspective, I love your new home!! Please prioritize the heating, as freezing temperatures can damage the interior fixtures.

  • @anneofgreengables1619
    @anneofgreengables1619 10 месяцев назад +2

    You are exactly right about the snoody robes. I have one and I live in Finland. Warmest thing ever! Lifesaver ATM!

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +2

      Oh I bet, I lived in Oulu for a while and an Oodie would have been amazing there!

  • @simonthorball
    @simonthorball 10 месяцев назад +7

    Welcome to Värmland Phillip. I live just a bit further north in Hagfors kommun. When you showed ice inside your bathroom, with surrounding plumbing, I was worried . The next couple of days will see temps. of minus 25, or even below. If you haven't already done so since posting this video, I'd implore you to place a portable electric heater in this room.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +3

      Thank you very much and thank you for the suggestion, we have done that and are hoping that it’s going to work wonders. Thankfully we do have a cable that runs through the cold water pipe that supposedly keeps it from freezing (at least in theory).

  • @Braggerman
    @Braggerman 10 месяцев назад +3

    Nice video, you got some work ahead, nice place and regular for 1900-50s sweden,,im living around 200 km from you so you are enjoying the snow at he moment 🙂

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +3

      Haha, I’m usually a fan of the snow, but I have had my car stuck in the snow so many times now that it’s getting old 😂 you’ll see in my next video that the snow is above my knees and it makes the garden quite difficult to envision 😂 but apart from that I’m enjoying the snow, just need to get a four-wheel-drive!

  • @dennismoore8351
    @dennismoore8351 10 месяцев назад +3

    It's a beautiful place. The house is a fairly large one. Here in America, bathrooms are done as wet rooms by code. It looks like you are going to have a wonderful experience. I can't wait to see how it goes.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you, it definitely is and I feel very lucky right now! It’s a great way to do bathrooms in houses, but where I grew up in England and Ireland, it was not very common at all! In fact, very little water protection was carried out in bathrooms and they would often get mouldy. Thanks for your support!

    • @hunkenpunken
      @hunkenpunken 10 месяцев назад +2

      Same in Sweden, but this house is old. Built a long time ago.
      The buildingcodes in Sweden is in many ways harder for newbuilt homes than in the states.
      Fx its not allowed to put electric cables in walls without a outer casing.

  • @sunoveristambul
    @sunoveristambul 22 дня назад +1

    So cozy in Sweden ❤ miss the winters and fall leaves 🍁

  • @elsestelema6273
    @elsestelema6273 10 месяцев назад +2

    It will be a beautiful home.Love your cat❤️. First job definitely is to get the chimney or chimneys repaired, it will make all the difference.
    After that it will feel like a home instead of a house. Is so spacious but strange how both bathrooms seem long and narrow.
    Can’t wait to see your next video, thanks for sharing!

  • @gunlindblad5202
    @gunlindblad5202 10 месяцев назад +2

    Beutiful old house. You have 2 chimneys, make shore to get someone in to fix them right away, also as quick as possible get a heatingsystem for the house. Since you have chimneys you should hsve a heating system that includs fire, look at pelletheating. The house is built so that when the chimneys get to warm the ventilation works great. And also skip that summerhouse heating.
    I wood not start to put extra insulation in until I lived there with proper heating 1 or 2 winters. To put extra insulation in meas that you also loose a lot of the original charm and beuty. There is arkitechts that can help you to solv some problems and it is not to expensive.
    The small bedrooms is whats called kattvindar and basicly wardrobes or storage in the old days, probably not insulated since they are not meant to be lived in. Keep in mind it has been a summerhouse!
    I just had my bathroom done and depending on size about 350-400000kr each and heatingsystem (pellets) about 300.000kr. The rest of the house you could probably fix yourself.
    About swedish bathrooms, they are the best! Specially when it comes to cleaning, just use the shower and clean the whole room, simple. And keep in mind in sweden we do hate to much stuff so forget about to much decoration, don’t make it unsellible.
    About the elctricety, I wood advise you to change that in the whole house, some computers must have earthcable and what I could see it is old. But you need to have a certified electrician to do it, check out thevrules before you start a projekt so you don’t end up having to do it again.

  • @grotehenk203
    @grotehenk203 10 месяцев назад +2

    Hi Phillip, what a picturesque house. Very romantic downstairs with the wallpaper ! I like it !
    With regard to the bathtub and electricity - room : do you have water pressure there ? I can imagine that the previous owners drained all the water from the pipes in the house when they left after the summer, to prevent bursting pipes from frozen water. Now you are there in the winter and the rooms are below or around freezing temp. A bathtub and electrics combo would not be my prio 1 ! But ....bursted water pipes with electricity.... def. prio one! No water pressure there ?, no worries 🙂. Next video, maybe show all ins and outs from the chimney and ask for suggestions from your viewers ? I think you will get a lot of response !

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you very much, it is a very beautiful house! Yes, we do have water pressure, the pipes run from underground and the cold water pipes have a heating cable inside to stop the water from freezing. I don’t think it 100% guarantees that the water won’t freeze, but at least it helps a bit. 🙂 yeah that’s what I’m scared of is burst of water pipes with electrics, not a great mixture to say the least! 😅
      That would definitely be a good video to make, I’m currently working on showing the outside of the property and the land it comes with although it’s very difficult to record today because it’s -27°C 😂 the chimneys will not be able to be fixed until April but after reading about this style of house, it will thrive when the chimneys are fixed
      Thank you so much !

  • @juliecarrolltontx2948
    @juliecarrolltontx2948 10 месяцев назад +2

    Looks small from the outside but it’s huge on the inside. No of that stuff would ever pass code in the US. I can’t wait to see it when it’s done

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +1

      I think it’s to do with the high ceilings on the inside. it’s funny because the house looks huge in real life, not so much on camera 😅 believe me, I’m surprised because Sweden is known for strict regulation! Thanks so much!

  • @sallysampson628
    @sallysampson628 10 месяцев назад +1

    Hi, great house! Firstly, chimney fixed, insulation (allowing house to still breathe) get the fires working continuously so plenty of wood and triple glazed windows/use extra heating methods but I’m not sure what would be most useful and economical. After this you can think about the cosmetics.
    Best wishes for your futures in your lovely new home!
    In U.K. my bedroom was + 14 in our bedroom and I was so cold 😂😂

  • @inhale.exhale.2527
    @inhale.exhale.2527 8 месяцев назад +1

    25:00 what i think you should do that i would like to see is an upfront scoping of all your 'major' tasks, gantt flowchart prioritisations, smart task lists for each, budgets, coverage of these, trade contacts and references as you have done in this vid. and count your hours of labour input too! oh, and keep a diary/journal (when so and so is due/turned up, comments (walked cement through the house 😱), your ups and downs learning. 😊
    glada renoveringar 👷‍♂️👷‍♀️

  • @merlinjones2660
    @merlinjones2660 24 дня назад

    To help with the heating of your new home, 1 fix chimney ,2 make sure you have a balanced flue system ,what that is ,is the house stays at the same pressure as the outside air = you have to have an air flow, in your house via your log burners/ fire, but in general, a 20 cm square hole to the outside with a grill over it, put the vent on the least windy side of the house , but also above snow line ???, to stop mice ect from entering, (don't block internal doors in the house with draft excluders) will allow the fires to breath but also taking away damp air = no mould issues ,for 1 person exhales 2 to 3 liters of damp air per day x 2 = 4 to6 liters of damp air per day, but with log burners running or not, = air movement 24 /7, = house stays ventilated at no costs, not omitting damp air will always go to the ground floors due to its weight, chimney sucks it out via wind blowing across chimney, just ideas is all wishing you both the best of luck with your new home,( ps one has a duel fuel burner cheap to run and keeps house warm dry )

  • @lutgardedh
    @lutgardedh 10 месяцев назад +7

    Watching from Belgium, such a big house, like to see diy renovations, here they do under floor heating specially in bathrooms, i think you maybe try to cover those windows with curtains where possible so the cold from outside can less come inside, greetings and love to see more👍

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +3

      Hey! Thanks for the recommendations you're definitely right! We didn't have any curtains until 2 weeks ago actually, we now need to look for more (but they get so expensive so we are going to go searching in some thrift stores). Thanks for the support I'm glad you liked the video and I will do my best to bring you some great content!

    • @kasperkjrsgaard1447
      @kasperkjrsgaard1447 10 месяцев назад +2

      Extra glass in the windows is propably the cheapest way to insulate the windows. It gives you the benefit of keeping the old windows which most likely was made from quality wood.

    • @elizabethwilliams3267
      @elizabethwilliams3267 10 месяцев назад +1

      Triple glazing is normal and necessary in scandinavian houses. This should be high on your todo list. 👍

  • @syncacct8576
    @syncacct8576 10 месяцев назад +2

    Lindseed oil is self igniting, so you need to be really careful with it. I would use an oil that is intended for floor use. I would also upgrade the electrical cabinet(s) to modern ones with modern circuit breakers instead of the old screw in type breakers. You should have an electrical systems planner to take a look at the installation and suggest improvements. Poor electrical installations are a major cause of residential fires.
    Insulated curtains are a great and cheap way of retaining more heat in the house. My bedroom is under a mansard roof with a semi circle dormer window, so I have created a two piece "curtain" from hard XPS foam that are padded and covered with black felt. I keep the curtain on all the time when we have subzero temperatures. I do remove them when it is sunny as the window is south facing and the air gets really hot between the window and the curtain

  • @bjornotter4298
    @bjornotter4298 10 месяцев назад +2

    My thoughts on your house purchase is that you need to find a professional carpenter with construction knowledge near where you live, don't listen to advice from other countries, as they probably have a completely different climate, completely different building rules and building traditions. The chimney, the heat and the insulation? seems to be the most urgent. Check the roof for leaks. The kitchen is large, but I think you will spend most of your time in the kitchen, especially in the winter, the walk-in pantry is great to have. The narrow rooms after the long sides are called in Sweden Kattvindar, a bit strange with a bathtub there. The wooden brown ceiling in the lower floor? have probably had a so-called woven roof once upon a time. A lot to take care of, but the house looks to be in good condition.

  • @Lib3x
    @Lib3x 10 месяцев назад +2

    This house is almost the same as my parents one. the space that you said felt too big, you could section of and make into a new bathroom/shower area.
    if you want to save the original windows, you can upgrade them, it is possible to install a 3 plane glass in the original frame. all you need to do after that is to add some insulation in the gap between the walls and the window.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +1

      Oh super interesting, that would be great if we could keep the windows!
      And that bathroom idea could actually be fairly interesting considering the state of the current one!
      Thanks! 🙏

    • @Lib3x
      @Lib3x 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@theNamesPhillip Ask your local glass-master, they should be able to do it, or at least point you in the right direction. Basically all they are doing is removing the old windows from the frame. mount a 3 plane glass inside. this will of course make the glass stand out from the frame a bit. but you blend/hide that with some trim.
      You have a lot of windows it seems. and I think you should prioritize redoing the insulation in the gap between the frame and the walls. as this is will save you a lot of money and a lot of energy in the long run, especially when you start using the fireplace.
      we use something called "drev" here in Sweden. there are different ways of doing it, traditionally we use Lindrev (old school) or glass-fiber (more common). they come in 6-10cm strips that you fold and push into the gap in three layers. then you tape the gap with seal-tape so that air can't escape or come inside. this option is fairly inexpensive
      A newer alternative is to use foam insulation. this is expensive but it has some advantages (especially when you want to save the old windows), and it's that it will expand into holes, nooks and crannies that you won't be able to get to unless you remove the entire window. basically sealing any potential drafts.
      you won't notice a huge difference between the two if you do it correctly. just remember to remove all off the old insulation, especially if you decide to foam. you don't want to mix the two.
      Another small upgrade you can do is buy some new seal-strips for the windows if they are old and crumbled. you'll find these in stores such as Clas Olson or Jula for example and are very inexpensive.
      I used to work as a window/door installer, so if you have any questions just ask and I'll try to answer the best I can :)
      Good luck, it's a beautiful house!

  • @emilyzena7070
    @emilyzena7070 18 дней назад

    Great video, really informative, and nice presentation manner; I love the traditional Swedish stairs!

  • @henriknielsen2517
    @henriknielsen2517 10 месяцев назад +2

    Välkommen hit! Looking forward to seeing what you will do with the house :)

  • @megreads9
    @megreads9 10 месяцев назад +3

    Congrats for having a beautiful home 🏡 bless you. Don't rush furnishing it enjoy every moment of it and in the end of the year you will find it so beautiful and cosy.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you for the kind words. We are here for the long run so taking it slow is definitely good advice!

  • @Sorrely1
    @Sorrely1 10 месяцев назад +1

    A stunning house in a stunning location. Once you have the insulation, chimneys and floors sealed, it will be beautiful. I’m in the UK and for £99 you’d maybe get a wreck at auction in a pretty grim area.

  • @markjaik
    @markjaik 10 месяцев назад +3

    Hi! Awesome place. We are looking for houses in Sweden aswel.
    Can you tell me near what town your house is? It looks really remote! And how big is yoir land? Awesome imo. Were looking for a place that is remote but still in proximity of bigger cities.
    Looking forward to your projects, thanks

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you! I live in an area called värmland, more specifically Forshaga kommun (I won’t get any more specific 😂). my particular area looks very remote, but it definitely isn’t especially compared to other houses you can buy. I have one Neighbour about half a kilometre away, my closest town with a shop and a doctor is about a 20 minute drive, and the closest city which is a fairly decent size one (Karlstad) is an hour drive at approximately. I will go over the land that the house is on in my next video, but it is a little smaller than what you can get at around 5000 m².

  • @lynnenewell6812
    @lynnenewell6812 10 месяцев назад +1

    Ok just found your channel and only half way through this video but late and have to go to bed so before I do and before I forget what I was going to say - a couple of tips
    - heat pump on the wall- everyone has them in New Zealand. They are both for heating and cooling your house and are the cheapest type of electrical heating you can get. However I use mine for taking the chill of the air when I’ve been out all day and not had the woodburner going all day. I live near the bottom of New Zealand where it gets very cold in winter and we like to have a wood burning stove which heats our living, dining and kitchen area (open plan) and towards the end of day it’s so warm we open the door to the hall and then the bedrooms. It’s a big burner and very very efficient as it burns the smoke twice to get rid of noxious stuff and emits very little bad stuff to the air outside. It was expensive but it’s the law here that if you have a wood burner it has to be of a particular standard. I love it because you can cook on it if needed but it’s so efficient at burning wood that you use less wood but it puts out more heat so off you are going to ever get one try and get a Yunca - a large one and your home will be toasty warm and you can even get them with wet backs to heat water but it does mean you get a bit less heat out of the fire as it’s heating water as well. The heat pumps are great but just not the same heat as a wood burner which is radiant heat. Also make sure you clean the filters on the inside of the wall mounted ones and floor if you have them too. It easy you just flip up the lid and pull the mesh plates out and soak in detergent ( dishwasher detergent is the best to use the scrub Ruth a brush, rinse, dry and put back. The outside h just needs a high pressure hose directed at the fins to get rid of dirt and it’s done!
    Your floor- never use oil on surfaces you need to clean. You need to seal it with three coats minimum of polyurethane in a satin finish. Then your floor can be washed without damaging the wood and the mop just glides over it. Same for tables or benches- must use polyurethane which is hard wearing and you can clean with ease.
    Your old heaters in the house may look pretty but probably not efficient and that means you chop and use heaps more wood than you need to snd the heat output won’t be as great.
    Windows are not true double glaze. That put in the secondary glaze as a separate window and take it out in summer in many places in Sweden.
    Make friends with your neighbor and as him or her to come over to you house and explain how thinks we’re done in the past or now. This will help you heaps to understand how to use things and fix things etc. Good luck
    Lynne New Zealand

  • @just_me8796
    @just_me8796 10 месяцев назад +1

    That stair hall is gorgeous. You might, over time, put mementos in there, a bencCh to sit on? But enjoy the openness of the space! Keep it light and airy and just feel how wonderful it is to step out of the bedroom and into that landing space. I'm totally jealous! LOL :D Congratulations

  • @sardonicus420
    @sardonicus420 9 месяцев назад +1

    Those shades that you thought was unnecessary are for making it cooler in the summer. It will get very hot in there. Because they are on the outside the room will not warm as much as if you would have shades on the inside.

  • @suzannebramble6564
    @suzannebramble6564 10 месяцев назад +4

    Loved this video! That landing area would make a great library.

  • @myykkoll
    @myykkoll 10 месяцев назад +3

    The bedframe looks amazing. Someone stole half your mattress tho 😂. First step imo should be to fix the stairs. I’d say strip the paint but surely the wood must’ve been ugly enough to think covering it with paint that bright was an improvement. Gorgeous house, engaging video, very funny. 👍

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад

      Thank you and defo glad that you agree about the stairs!! I love my thin mattress, way better on back health in my experience. Now my back hurts but it is more to do with an issue from running. Thanks for the feedback!!

  • @XRPSAINT
    @XRPSAINT 10 месяцев назад +1

    Are required to vent your boiler through the chiminy? Running a new metal flue for the gas boilers should be much less expensive than having the masonry reworked on your chimney and you may be able to DIY depending on the regulation, you may have to have it inspected after you complete the project. Look up the code and make a list of supplies, invite several contractors in and ask them to quote the job with materials. Ask them how they intend to run the flues and if you don't feel comfortable doing it after that at least you have the quotes.
    You can do it, I believe in you!

  • @teresahasu6680
    @teresahasu6680 10 месяцев назад +1

    Woah, so cold. My concern would be water pipes freezing. Get solar if you can. Get the fireplaces fixed ASAP so you can live there. Can’t afford to be sick. As for the electrical panel in the upstairs bathroom, I would shorten the bathroom to create an oversized linen closet so the panel isn’t above the tub. Convert the tub to a shower and relocate the toilet. So much to do but exciting as well. Best of luck on this adventure.

  • @wonder_creative
    @wonder_creative 10 месяцев назад +2

    Nice place. Location looks great. Heating that place is a full time job and will cost a fortune, I’m heading to Sweden in may to look for a house with lots of land and a tiny house footprint. I’ll be leaving a big house behind and will never have a large house again.

  • @JMNYC5
    @JMNYC5 10 месяцев назад +2

    ...Superfint hus och bra placering mellan städerna...Lycka Till med renovering, och ladda upp med mycket plåster och tålamod!🧡

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  10 месяцев назад +1

      Tack så jätte mycket! Det kommer jag definitivt att göra! 😂

  • @aprilwalus3863
    @aprilwalus3863 9 месяцев назад +2

    Someday I hope to move to Sweden, this helps a lot and would love to see more.

    • @theNamesPhillip
      @theNamesPhillip  9 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you so much, I will definitely get more content out for you and I will keep my fingers crossed that you were able to make your dream come true 🤞😁

  • @misterbalrog
    @misterbalrog 5 месяцев назад +1

    Regarding våtrumscertifiering, it's still not a guarantee that the insurance will pay for any damages, if any, on a room done with it. We had a leak in our newly renovated bathroom by a certified company and practicioner, the insurance company still didnt pay out anything because according to them, it was done erronously anyway and thus it was not covered.
    And regarding chimneys, they do have to tell you how often it has been used and if it has been tested/approved recently by an approved chimney sweep and/or fire inspector.