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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

From bungalow to house

30 replies

SansaStark90 · 25/04/2025 20:02

I know this doesn’t belong in this section but for traffic….im very unhappy in the small bungalow I have. But, it’s in a great location. Other bungalows on a the adjoining street, I’m in a cul de sac, have made them into houses.

If I got planning permission, what kind of money are we talking to go from a bungalow to a house and render it?

OP posts:
WindingStair · 25/04/2025 20:07

A bungalow is a house, OP, just a single-storey one. Not possible to estimate costs of building works without knowing far more about size etc.

SansaStark90 · 25/04/2025 20:15

WindingStair · 25/04/2025 20:07

A bungalow is a house, OP, just a single-storey one. Not possible to estimate costs of building works without knowing far more about size etc.

Edited

Would this help?

From bungalow to house
OP posts:
Moonnstars · 25/04/2025 20:18

It all depends what you want doing. Can you build into the loft? Would you just want an extension over the garage?
I think you would need a professional to come out and give quotes.

SansaStark90 · 25/04/2025 20:20

No I want to add another level to turn into a house from a bungalow

OP posts:
Moonnstars · 25/04/2025 20:26

SansaStark90 · 25/04/2025 20:20

No I want to add another level to turn into a house from a bungalow

Which is where you would need a professional to actually see if this is doable and to quote. I am not sure how it works but surely it depends on the building structure and how they would build onto this. I have only seen people do loft conversions, extensions over garages or adding on to the building by building to the side and taking over some of the garden.
A profession would be able to talk you through the options as I also imagine costs vary depending on area.
If you say others in your street have done it, why not ask one of them for the name of the builders they used?

BoldBlueZebra · 25/04/2025 20:44

It would all hinge on the foundation. The foundation for a bungalow is very different to that required for a house as it needs to be able to cope with the weight and spread of pressure if the weight on the earth around it. If it’s a reasonably modern bungalow 60’s on wards it won’t have the foundation. Bungalows hold value so much better than houses as they are always in a shortage. Also planning for that would be a nightmare. You could do a loft conversion for much less cost - I’d be tempted to move the hall to bedroom 3 and incorporate a dog leg stair case and convert the loft into 2 rooms or one good room and en-suite with some big dorms windows. But again you need proper advice and someone to come in and look at the joists and the roof structure and what not

BoldBlueZebra · 25/04/2025 20:45

Having done a loft conversion in a bungalow before I would say whatever your quote is add 50% because it’s a bloody nightmare

BoldBlueZebra · 25/04/2025 20:47

What you need to consider is how you use the space and what bothers you about it now. The beauty of bungalows if that very few walls are load bearing and if they are it’s only the roof so changing the internal layout is relatively easy

SansaStark90 · 25/04/2025 20:50

BoldBlueZebra · 25/04/2025 20:44

It would all hinge on the foundation. The foundation for a bungalow is very different to that required for a house as it needs to be able to cope with the weight and spread of pressure if the weight on the earth around it. If it’s a reasonably modern bungalow 60’s on wards it won’t have the foundation. Bungalows hold value so much better than houses as they are always in a shortage. Also planning for that would be a nightmare. You could do a loft conversion for much less cost - I’d be tempted to move the hall to bedroom 3 and incorporate a dog leg stair case and convert the loft into 2 rooms or one good room and en-suite with some big dorms windows. But again you need proper advice and someone to come in and look at the joists and the roof structure and what not

I’ve seen lots of people turn the same house as mine from a bungalow to a house. I’m going to be cheeky and knock on their doors and ask for some advice

OP posts:
BoldBlueZebra · 25/04/2025 20:53

SansaStark90 · 25/04/2025 20:50

I’ve seen lots of people turn the same house as mine from a bungalow to a house. I’m going to be cheeky and knock on their doors and ask for some advice

The cost of building materials and labour now it would prob be cheaper and easier to just move

cheddercherry · 25/04/2025 20:54

You probably won’t make back the money it will cost. Bungalows are desirable and in demand, once you add stairs they lose that appeal to people downsizing. Depends on the roof and if you’ve got a hip to gable or whether you can just go into the loft space. If you need to build out the roof then you’re looking to add loads to the build. If you’re just going to put a skylight up then that’s obviously much less work but also much less space.

We were quoted 55k to add two bedrooms and a bathroom upstairs (we didn’t really need and en-suite but thought initially why not) Decided it would never actually add that to the house, would be way too much hassle and instead built out the back, added a garden studio and rejigged the interior. We’ve ended up with more room than we would have had upstairs, just more thought out with the help of a savvy architect for basically 1/3 of the cost.

Basically what space do you actually need and why, and then seek advice on how best to achieve that.

Mrsgreen100 · 25/04/2025 20:58

What extra accommodation do you really need?
A really well modern nice bungalow super contemporary can be a really lovely home to live in much cheaper than sticking on another story and doing some chalet bungalow thing and much cooler if the plot is big enough,
they sell really well if done right

SansaStark90 · 25/04/2025 21:22

Mrsgreen100 · 25/04/2025 20:58

What extra accommodation do you really need?
A really well modern nice bungalow super contemporary can be a really lovely home to live in much cheaper than sticking on another story and doing some chalet bungalow thing and much cooler if the plot is big enough,
they sell really well if done right

I’m wanting to add a whole other level. No dormer or chalet, don’t even know what that is.

OP posts:
Katemax82 · 25/04/2025 21:30

I live in a rented bungalow with an amazing loft, I really wish it could be turned into a bedroom

Sminty2 · 25/04/2025 21:37

I looked at doing this to a bungalow and I was quoted £3500 per square metre, plus electrics, plumbing etc. It’s easier to just buy a house as no one can anticipate issues.

Gettingbysomehow · 25/04/2025 21:42

Completely off topic but I moved into a bungalow temporarily while my house purchase was dragging on forever and my very elderly cat went bananas looking for the stairs. She kept looking up at the ceiling and miaowing. It was tragic 😂

Bikergran · 26/04/2025 09:07

SansaStark90 · 25/04/2025 20:20

No I want to add another level to turn into a house from a bungalow

Why? Do you want more bedrooms, or more living space? It would be much cheaper to juggle the rooms around and adapt the garage into an extension, the footprint of your bungalow is quite generous, and it would just mean improving the wall thickness and putting windows and insulation rather than a massive build. Room sizes are better than in a new build, and most new places just have parkjng space rather than a garage.

SlipperyLizard · 26/04/2025 09:12

I know it isn’t what you want to do, OP, but for an indication of costs we replaced our bungalow roof with a new higher roof including a loft conversion in 2019. It cost £140k + cost of two bathrooms, although we had slate tiles and other features that bumped the price up a bit.

Building a whole second floor would, I expect, be north of that given the rise in cost of materials and added complexity/time.

MorrisonsPlatter · 26/04/2025 09:13

We had two upstairs bedrooms added to our bungalow for me and my sister in about 1962. Cost £999.

KathrynWheel · 26/04/2025 09:55

Gettingbysomehow · 25/04/2025 21:42

Completely off topic but I moved into a bungalow temporarily while my house purchase was dragging on forever and my very elderly cat went bananas looking for the stairs. She kept looking up at the ceiling and miaowing. It was tragic 😂

Aw...poor sweetie

Withoutfearorfavour · 26/04/2025 10:01

I had a quote in 2008. It was over £100,000.
Cheaper to Move even back then

feelingbleh · 26/04/2025 10:03

I would honestly just move that sounds an expensive nightmare

ThinWomansBrain · 26/04/2025 10:11

SansaStark90 · 25/04/2025 21:22

I’m wanting to add a whole other level. No dormer or chalet, don’t even know what that is.

My parents had a chalet bungalow on retiring - it had been built that way.
Had an upstairs, but the bedrooms were like the bedrooms of an attic conversion, with sloping ceilings and narrow storage in the eaves.

It's not something anyone can give you an accurate quote on here, not knowing the building, local rates etc - why not just ask a local builder to give you a quote and discuss options?

howcanitbetrue · 26/04/2025 10:11

As per previous poster - it will depend on your foundations

It might be easier/less complicated/potentially cheaper to knock down the bungalow and rebuild a house.

Not sure what you've got against chalet/dormer bungalows - I grew up in the former and it had proper stairs/ windows etc. just had o ly two rooms ( massive loft space).

You sound a bit petulant to be honest.

Are you generally never satisfied?

Sell up and buy a house

dogcatkitten · 26/04/2025 10:18

A lot depends on the roof space, our attic space was too low so we built a two storey extension at the back (knocked through into the original structure, not just tagged on the back) with a slight rise in ridge height to increase the ceiling height upstairs and a flat roof on the extension. I don't think we were allowed to change the front roof of the bungalow or put windows in there. A structural engineer had to design the roof alterations to make sure it was safe. If it's a newish bungalow the foundations should be fine for two storeys, ours is a twenties bungalow so the builder had to do a trial pit to look at the foundations, which the building inspector had to approve. We got drawings done by an architect and then asked a few builders to quote based on the design. This was a few years ago so the costs would not be comparable, but it wasn't cheap!

Like you our location was perfect, but the bungalow was very small, the extension cost less than buying an equivalent house in the area, but they are very seldom for sale anyway.