Looks ok to me and would solve the housing crisis
Looks ok to me and would solve the housing crisis
It'd make a lovely garden brewpub!
Sheer luxury. When I were a lad (... and that's where the Monty Python sketch ends, the rest is true)It won't be long before we see these again, we have 1.3 million immigrants on the cards to come in and there is already a housing shortage.
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I have an interesting take on this.Sheer luxury. When I were a lad (... and that's where the Monty Python sketch ends, the rest is true)
.... in 1964 during the £10 immigrant scheme, we lived in Nissen huts. The school was a very long Nissen hut with rolladoor shutters in between the classrooms. The church was the school with the shutters rolled up. At the age of 10, I saw nothing wrong with it, it was home and it was comfortable.
I wish we (UK) were enlightened enough tp accept a million plus immigrants we're short of all trades including builders, truck drivers, farm workers, nurses, teachers etc, etc. Most of all, we're short of young, fit workers to pay the next generation's pensions.
There is an estate near me where these are still lived in. Known locally as “the prefabs” some have been bricked up but lots still have the tin walls. Must be noisy in a hail showerIt won't be long before we see these again, we have 1.3 million immigrants on the cards to come in and there is already a housing shortage.
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We had them here too, called them the same prefabs, got a feeling they could have been cement sheeting, not sure. I remember a number of years ago one was sold in Williamstown (an affluent suburb of the bay area) often when people buy houses they get pulled down and a new one built. The guy who bought this one wanted to pull it down only to find it was grade two listed!There is an estate near me where these are still lived in. Known locally as “the prefabs” some have been bricked up but lots still have the tin walls. Must be noisy in a hail shower
We had them here too, called them the same prefabs, got a feeling they could have been cement sheeting, not sure. I remember a number of years ago one was sold in Williamstown (an affluent suburb of the bay area) often when people buy houses they get pulled down and a new one built. The guy who bought this one wanted to pull it down only to find it was grade two listed!
As for the tin roofs there are millions of houses here with them, even today they are still building them with colorbond roofing. Even in heavy rain you couldn't hear yourself speak because of the racket.
They are well insulated against the noise now.If all roofs here were the same we would all be deaf
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