Back To The Thirties!

That apartment served my family well for many years. I’d yearned to buy and live in a “new build” for such a long time and the experience, when it came, lived up to my expectations.

Suddenly, completely out of the blue, an opportunity arose: the opportunity to go back to living in a nineteen thirties period property, and not just any property but the one where I had grown up. The decision was not a easy one but finally it was made and I had an exciting project ahead of me – a thirties house to renovate, decorate and inhabit!

And so the story of the renovation begins ………….

How It Began

The house I grew up in was built in the mid nineteen thirties. We moved into the house in the late nineteen sixties. I loved the house. I felt at home on the very day we moved in, as if it had always been home. Now there was a garden to play in, stairs to climb, an extra room to explore. As the years passed, however, I noticed I was beginning to envy my young friends who lived in ‘modern’ houses. They could look out of their windows unimpeded while I had to peer through diamond leaded panes. They had shiny, silvery door handles inside their homes – we had dark brown doorknobs fashioned from a material I could not identify. (I hadn’t, at that point, learnt the term ‘Bakelite’.) My friends’ homes had lovely plain walls which travelled from the floor to the ceiling without interruption. Strictly speaking, so did ours, but I hated those wooden picture rails which encircled the rooms and made the walls seem shorter. The features my friends’ homes lacked – the very features of our own home which I was viewing with increasing disdain – were classic features of English nineteen thirties houses. “When I grow up, I’m going to live in a modern house” I promised myself.

1930s Semi-detached houses

Photo Credit: https://www.dreamstime.com/stock-photo-row-brick-tile-built-semi-detached-houses-s-street-gosforth-newcastle-uk-image55049188