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Author: Subject: any roofers or ppl had roof work done?
john_p_b

posted on 17/9/07 at 05:54 PM Reply With Quote
any roofers or ppl had roof work done?

basically roof on our house, all the felting inside it is falling off, cellings are looking a bit damp in places so think it all needs redoing which i do believe means the roof coming off.

anyone got any rough idea at the cost of having this work done? 3 bed semi so nothing special to work around.

thanks for any help.





built a car, built a home, had a family. lost the family, lost the home, still got the car.

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x_flow57

posted on 17/9/07 at 06:02 PM Reply With Quote
I have just managed to get a quote, a result in it's self, to re-do the roof on my end terrace house. Strip seal arround the chimney and gulleys etc. inc. scaffolding and skip £6000






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nick205

posted on 17/9/07 at 06:23 PM Reply With Quote
You're not wrong about it being a job in itself to get someone to quote in the first place

Our house needs the same - late 70's 3 bed semi with perished felt and crap tiles. I've had 3 people round to quote and only one actually bothered to submit a quote and even that wasn't what I'd asked him to quote for either

I'm still looking!

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BenB

posted on 17/9/07 at 06:24 PM Reply With Quote
Roofer IMHO take the wee cos they know its a job few people will take on themselves....

Our neighbours just spent a load of cash on getting their house re-roofed. The builders spent most of the last two months lying on top of our neighbours garage in the sunshine or knocking down our garden fence with their scaffolding poles....

My own experience with roofers has been even worse (bordering on intimidation + threats of violence).....

Definately make sure you get a good recommendation. Cos it's way up high they think they can get away with shoddy work only a true cowboy (or girl) would be proud of....

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john_p_b

posted on 17/9/07 at 06:38 PM Reply With Quote
6k?! i feel sick now!





built a car, built a home, had a family. lost the family, lost the home, still got the car.

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richardR1

posted on 17/9/07 at 06:43 PM Reply With Quote
Go through their national federation NFRC to find an approved contractor in your area. Both of the firms we use for roofing works are members and are very good.





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ecosse

posted on 17/9/07 at 06:46 PM Reply With Quote
You could have look HERE and HERE for sprayed foam, if you have easy access to the underside of the roof,

Cheers

Alex
PS
plenty other companies doing the same thing too

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Peteff

posted on 17/9/07 at 06:59 PM Reply With Quote
6k?! i feel sick now!

I think Surrey prices are double what we would expect further north. It took 2 years to get a crew to do our roof. We had it done 4 years ago and it cost £4,500 for a double terrace with an extension on the back and new gutters and downpipes. A single terrace runs at about £3,000 round here now but there shouldn't be any gulleys on a terrace roof, just the chimney flashings.





yours, Pete

I went into the RSPCA office the other day. It was so small you could hardly swing a cat in there.

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zilspeed

posted on 17/9/07 at 07:06 PM Reply With Quote
I'm in Scotland.

In my line of work (housing grants) I see prices for this sort of stuff all the time.

For an average mid or end terraced house with nothing complicated going on it costs from £3,500 to strip a roof back to the sarking and refelt, batten and tile it with dry ridges and verges.

Start getting into valleys and hips on the roof and the prices increase.

Does your roof have any rot due to the ongoing water ingress ?
Because that would need some looking at too.

Pity you're not up here because I know lots of reliable roofers who don't charge like a rhino.






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DarrenW

posted on 17/9/07 at 07:10 PM Reply With Quote
For 6K id expect a total new roof not just stripping the tiles off, new felt / lats and relaying the tiles. In fact i managed to get a complicated hipped extension and huge garage roof done for a lot less from scratch.

Are you sure it needs fully felting. Its not uncommon for the felt to rot back from the edges and the ridges etc needing re-pointing. A good roofer should be able to remove all ridges and the end couple of tiles, slot in new felt and bed them all down on new mortar. Just dont let them push a bit of new mortar in the old without lifting them off.






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Mal

posted on 17/9/07 at 08:07 PM Reply With Quote
Spons Building Works Estimating Books

Go to the reference section of your local library, taking with you the details of the job. This would include the roof area, the type of tile, type of underfelting, length of any valleys, number of chimney penetrations and so on.
The tables in the books will allow you to estimate the cost of the job, so that you will know when you are given a fair estimate.

Mal

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x_flow57

posted on 17/9/07 at 08:35 PM Reply With Quote
We have a 3 story end of terrace (the middle houses are 2 story) which has a gulley at the ft, and ridges top and rear. Needs doing because the nails have rusted and the odd tile's been moving for a while. The £6K does not include re felting as far as I know, must check.






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trifield

posted on 18/9/07 at 08:11 AM Reply With Quote
Hi, 6K sounds very excessive
My cousin who lives close to me had all tiles taken off, relatted, refelted, 2 additional rows of tiles added as originals didn't overlap enough and all scaffolding included for £1400 by a reputable local roofing company. (1970's 3 bed semi)

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MikeRJ

posted on 18/9/07 at 09:23 AM Reply With Quote
Had our roof done recently on a 3 bed semi. The slates, battons and felt were stripped off and replaced, and I had plastic gutters and fascia boards put in. The slates were real ones, but with quite a few missing, so decided to cash in the slates and have synthetic ones fitted as we won't be living here by the time they expire. Next door was done at the same time, and I think the total price was about £3.8k after slate cashback, including scaffolding and skip hire (bloody expensive things those skips!).

The builder was not very local (he was from Torquay, I'm in Plymouth), but came recommended and did a good job. Scaffolders lived just up the road and they took forever to put the scaffolding up and to take it down afterwards (2 months after job was done). This seems common as they use your house as storage until they need the scaffolding for their next job. Still...scaffold planks are very useful...

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JoelP

posted on 18/9/07 at 12:53 PM Reply With Quote
i paid 1600 in bolton for a full front and patched back, and new lead, on a regular 2 sided end terrace. Needed about 50 tiles buying in, rest reused.
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nick205

posted on 18/9/07 at 03:04 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by richardR1
Go through their national federation NFRC to find an approved contractor in your area. Both of the firms we use for roofing works are members and are very good.



Spoken to 3 companies today from the NFRC register - all coming this week to survey and quote. Let's see what happens

This sort of thing always makes me think that things like roofing felt are designed to wear out to keep people in work replacing them.

All the copper pipining in a industrial unit has started leaking like a sieve. The plumber called in to fix it reckons it's down to dodgy copper pipe imported in the 70's that just gives up after a while.

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