Amazing video, have recently moved into one of the original 1950s Jordansville concrete homes. Have already seen a bunch be knocked down in the area, I'm wondering if there are any groups out there that have collected info on the houses both historic and semi recent. Love the history and character they lend to the neibourhood but would like to bring the house into modern times with a greater focus on efficiency. So anyone out there that's had any experience with renos would love to go down that path instead of knockdown where the history is lost and the embeded energy in concrete is wasted.
@gretagXxx Жыл бұрын
We've made ours pretty energy efficient with solar panels and going off gas. Our friends up the road have made theirs a passive haus!
@jkelectrical7 ай бұрын
Love the use of safety squints!
@dogthatshags Жыл бұрын
Memories. Tough area back in the 70’s and 80’s Ashburton and Jordanville. Amazing I only saw ONE ‘cheese grater’ at front entrance, at the very end of video. Ex-Jordy Tech boy, frequented Power Ave,Victory Blvd commish flats and the Matthew Flinders Hotel.
@melissajanemoore88692 жыл бұрын
My nan and pop moved into their house brand new in Victory Boulevard Ashburton when my uncle's and mum were kids, and my pop worked in the factory. I remember the fire that gutted the factory when I was eight years old. Most of the street came outside and stood in the reserve across the road and watched the smoke. Nan and Pop bought the place in the (1970's???) as part of the buy back scheme they had going then. She sold it in 1986 for $60,000, and today it's worth about $1.2 mil, because of the land it stands on. I've always said that if I ever won the lottery, I'd buy the place and fix it up.
@dougmerrick173713 күн бұрын
Hi. If your Nan and Pop bought their house new, I doubt it was in the 70's. My parents bought their home in Liberator St. in 1950. Long before the 70's, the whole area was completely filled with housing commission houses. I was born in 1954. Cheers
@melissajanemoore886913 күн бұрын
@dougmerrick1737 they rented it from the housing commission in the 1950's. My nan bought the house from them in the 1970's when the commission had a tennant buy back program.
@saltyfish21527 ай бұрын
Wow, such an interesting video. Didn’t know Holmesglen looked like this back in the old days, the current one that we have to this day looks more modern compared to this one
@pulsecodemodulated2 ай бұрын
@6:44 I actually live in a very cosy 3 bedroom house built by the commission in the late 1950's which has one of those prefab chimneys with the distinct line pattern at the top.
@RS-rj5sh7 ай бұрын
Now the site of Holmesglen TAFE, it was actually the Commonwealth Tank Factory during WW2, they built tanks there for the Australian Army.
@lizmishbonify Жыл бұрын
I still live in the concrete units in Benghazi Ave Ashburton
@Prieze8682 жыл бұрын
Dr James Evans because it's concrete I did a diploma building construction actually at Holmesglen where they made that with the in the factory now I take where they made these concrete homes you would have to have wall upholstery inside because you cannot wallpaper the concrete obviously cos it's porous and maybe you'll have to have a blue board with a a vapour barrier in between the concrete and the BlueBoard the insulation on the outside unless you bring it up with a with a polystyrene brick behind it obviously some blow I insulation