‘Bad idea’: 5 renos you should never try

1 month ago 15
 Tim Hunter.

SUNDAY TELEGRAPH – Pictured is a construction site in Marsden Park today where bricks collapsed from some scaffolding and trapped a worker who was rescued by emergency services. Picture: Tim Hunter.


Want to know how to spend double on your renovation budget? Do the expert work yourself, then pay a professional to do it right.

Ever wondered why your house didn’t sell fast? You did the reno work yourself.

Think you can learn how to do the job by watching YouTube? See point one.

Wanting to DIY but knowing when not to is a hard lesson to learn.

Saving money on a reno can cost a bomb, so don’t fall into the trap of doing-it-yourself, only to find you need to hire a tradie to fix your epic fail.

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DIY can be tiring – and costly if you don’t do it properly.


REAL LIFE ISN’T A RENO SHOW

Matthew Menichelli has earned a place in Australia’s heart as “Matty”, TV’s The Block as a hipages brand ambassador in 2019 and an independent builder in 2022.

He agrees that reno TV shows offer unrealistic expectations.

“You see a project that you would allow eight to 10 months to complete, and you do it in eight to 10 weeks,” says Menichelli from his Melbourne base.

“Don’t get sucked into reality TV too much.”

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Hipages images for the Fixer column

Matthew Menichelli from The Block.


SEE QUOTES AND EXPERIENCE BEFORE YOU HIRE

Tradies, I’m sad to say, have a reputation for never getting back to you with quotes – and you should get three quotes, which can be a pain.

This is why platforms such as hipages make it easier: you enter the job once and qualified tradies come to you with quotes. No chasing. Alternatives like Airtasker and One Flare can be cost effective – but currently the only online platform that connects homeowners with qualified, trusted tradies is hipages, where tradies are vetted before they can join.

Menichelli says The Block can leave tradies ‘running on empty’ by the end of the series.

“It’s definitely not a cake walk,” says The Block favourite.

“The only way to get through is sheer grit and determination.”

And that’s exactly the kind of professional you want working on your own production.

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You need grit and determination to DIY – like The Block’s Kyal and Kara Demmrich.


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TOP FIVE JOBS WHERE YOU NEED A TRADIE

After the many properties Menichelli has been called to repair, here are the top five areas he says DIY-ers should avoid.

1 PAINTING

According to Menichelli, this is the most frequent botch up. “People don’t realise you have to put in the prep work,” he says.

“Just putting a coat of paint over a diminished substrate is not going to work out.”

2 DECKS

“We’ve seen a few decks where the owner has even attempted the actual decking frame.”

Besides not being up to code, and dangerous to walk on, it is a costly fix.

“The difficulty is explaining to the client that to rectify it, you pretty much have to scrap it and start again. So essentially they’re paying for the deck twice.”

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young brunette woman smooths a plastering indoor wall using sandpaper

Only do your own plastering if you are happy to stare at your handiwork every day.


3 PLASTERING

Anything that is on the interior of a home and anything that needs a highly finished product is best done by a professional, because “you’ll be staring at it every day.”

4 ELECTRICS

Menichelli says low voltage is OK for the homeowner to tackle. “Like garden lights, with a transformer, because that is very much ‘plug and play’, but the minute you are

dealing with 240 volts that’s a no. Why anyone would attempt it is beyond me.”

Plus, it’s illegal – and the homeowner can be fined up to $40,000.

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Think twice before attempting home plumbing.


5 PLUMBING

Changing a washer is OK, but think hard after that.

“We’ve seen a lot of remedial plumbing work, fixing people’s own renovations. We were called to a 1950s weatherboard home. They were running their washing machine waste through a hole in the floor. We had a bit of laugh. It’s a bad idea to be pumping out your washing machine water over your foundations.”

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