Saturday, November 9, 2024

Saved from blackberries and ruin: See how one couple restored this 170-year-old cottage

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When Kirsty and Mark were looking for a property in the Adelaide Hills, the heritage officer and architect were after something a little different.

They found it in the form of a 170-year-old colonial cottage that was slowly being reclaimed by thickets of blackberries and overgrowth around it.

The couple purchased the property known as Longview, which included a cottage and a second modern house, for $945,000 in late 2021.

Their plan was a DIY restoration on the 40-square-metre cottage to save the history of the building, and also give their family of five a little more room.

Even if there weren’t heritage restrictions in place, Mark and Kirsty said their aim was to do an authentic restoration, using as many techniques and materials specific to the period it was built as possible.

“There’ll be no modern paints or modern cement renders, it’ll be all lime — lime renders and lime paints,” Mark said.

The budget was $100,000 and they were hoping they could have it finished in a year.

But before any restoration could begin, they had to claw it back from the stranglehold of nearby weeds.

Piles upon piles of weeds had to be removed from the cottage.(ABC/Fremantle Media)

 “I think the blackberries are literally holding it together,” Kirsty told ABC TV’s Restoration Australia.

“It’s like having a little, or big, present in your backyard that you’re not allowed to open yet.

“As we peeled away all the layers of vegetation, it got more exciting in a way because you could see the way it was built.”

The cottage was built by hand in the 1850s using a hybrid of methods called pise or rammed earth, and lath and mud, using materials readily available like clay, straw, horse hair, rocks and timber batons.

The cottage had been left to ruin for many years. / It was lifted as part of the restoration.

The walls were wrapped in a crumbling lime render, and the original roof shingles were made from local stringybark.

An authentic restoration

Once the area around the cottage was cleared, the real restoration work began.

Mark and Kirsty’s plan for the cottage included:

  • Restoring the enclosed sleep-out area of the cottage to its original design as a verandah
  • Lifting, straightening and resurfacing the internal and external walls 
  • Lifting and replacing the timber floors
  • Turning the rear area into a modern kitchen and bathroom
  • Keeping the stringybark shingles if possible and potentially installing a new tin roof to heritage standards
  • Repairing and restoring as many original windows as possible
  • Re-laying the stone wall at the front of the cottage
A close up of a woman and a man standing in a dilapidated room. They're looking to the left of the screen

Kirsty and Mark set themselves a goal of $100,000 for the restoration.(ABC/Fremantle Media)

In an effort to save costs, the pair planned on doing the bulk of the manual labour themselves.

“No normal builder would want to take it on,” Kirsty said.

“We had one guy come and say, ‘Oh I’d put a hose on it and let it wash down the hill’ and you sort of think, ‘Well you’re not for us’.

“Yeah, we are insane but it’s a pretty special little cottage.”

A composite of three pictures showing the crumbling walls and decayed timber in the cottage

The cottage had been left to crumble, with many of the timbers holding it up rotted through.(ABC/Fremantle Media)

Wobbly walls, lifted floors

One of Kirsty and Mark’s biggest challenges was the cottage’s walls.

They needed to be pulled upright and most of its timber footings were decimated by rot or termites, and needed replacing.

“[They] will be still reasonably wobbly and no straight lines but we will try and square it up a bit as we go,” Mark said.

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