Thank you! This one took like 15hr to edit. I am really proud so far of the consistency, doing a video a week for the past 21 weeks straight has been a great challenge, and I've grown quick for sure!
Thats 40 hectares of land for 3.5k??? So thats less that $90 per hectare. We just sold some arable farm land in Poland a year ago for around $28k PER hectare. So 311 times more expensive. Whole different part of the world but still the inflation or apreciation in price is insane.
An old friend of mine had a sign in his room when he was a kid. It said "Work fascinates me... I can sit and watch it for hours..." That's pretty much what I'm doing here isn't it... 😆
Yeah, or simply "Fraktur" (Gothic Print). Cant read all words, but it seems to be about a "shop owner" something "who himself lives in a backroom while he was" something second.
Back in 1991 , I demolished an old chimney in my house in Denver . I cleaned all the bricks and used them for a path - between the house and the fence - on the north side of the house . Since it never got sunshine , the bricks developed a nice , mossy covering over the next few years and it prevented the area from being muddy .
I hope you're saving those two panel doors. Even if you don't use them, I can guarantee somebody would appreciate you donating them to a habitat for humanity. I was happy to snag up seven of those from my local habitat because my home has an addition and it has different doors than the original build. And obviously the two panel doors have more character than the standard hollow cores that the addition has
This whole project is giving me flashbacks to gutting and renovating our 1910 home in the Philly suburbs. It's a ton of work to take down to the studs, but knowing there isn't any knob & tube behind the walls, termites, mold, etc. gives a lot of piece of mind. It's worth it in the long run. There are a few rooms where we retained the original plaster walls, etc. and honestly I regret not doing them while we were in demo mode.
It's the 'boing' for me! Our home is 100 years younger than yours. We renovated the bathroom and kitchen 8 years ago and were thrilled to find all sorts of 'debris' under the old cabinets. A calender from a mechanic workshop, a xmas card, a plastic bead bracelet, and a few business cards. From the bathroom floor we pulled up a beer box, that was odd and had us scratching our heads. We also found evidence of a fire under the bathroom floor. More scratching of brainbox. Excellent production, as always. Thanks, Chris. Every episode is amazing.
When we gutted and renovated our Victorian house in Montreal, we found newspaper in the walls as well. I sorted through them and had a selection arranged and framed. I really like it and it's a bit of the history of the house on display.
I love that you're saving some of the original materials that are still good and usable. It really irks me how people nowadays just throw out everything, even if still in great usable condition, and it all just ends up in the dump for no reason. If anything, you can sell those old bricks to someone who's looking for something like that if you don't end up using it.
Hey Chris, this might be a late suggestion, but buy a wheelbarrow to haul all that debris around. They make 2 wheeled ones that are balanced in a way that you don't feel the load weight when lifting it to move it around. You can find them for less than 100 bucks if you search around. Also, it hurts to hear what you paid for the home considering what it's going to cost to remodel it. However, you can't buy the education you will get with hands on experience on fully remodeling a home from scratch. Think of it as more education. After you're done, you're going to be a General Contractor with experience under your belt, which will open up opportunities for more work, and you can film that work and upload it to TH-cam, making money twice on it. See you next week, brother!
Regarding proper tools: have you considered looking into whether Philadelphia has a tool library? Baltimore has one. Proper tools can make jobs far less painful and so much faster. It would be soooo worth it to join during a home renovation project (and definitely worth continuing to support beyond)
When you were taking apart the enclosure, camera angles and shadows (and not paying attention) made it seem a solid wood floor - a closet, basically. When you started descending through the floor my mind was blown. A lot of great progress, thanks again for sharing!
Bless your heart, you are such a hard worker! You practically peeled that dry wall off, sorted and swept and sorted again! You’re doing great, honest video of a very messy project. Best wishes for a good week.
When I gutted my house in creston bc Canada I found newspaper from 1930. When I changed the water line I found 2 beer bottles, a whiskey bottle and a ketchup bottle from 1938. I also discovered it had been a one room cabin originally. The fun part of renovations. The designing was fun too
You may not want to use those bricks in reconstruction, but you could lay a really nice patio floor with them. Nicer than concrete. Or something to hide the chainlink fence. Demo is so much fun.
It was one of the first weeks that I had a solid 5 days of work on the house, now that most of the logistical work is done (permitting and plan drawing) I have more time to work!
Glad you’re salvaging the doors. I def get it about the radiators. In theory it’s nice to think about keeping them to reflect the history of the house. But, in reality they take up a lot of space and all the plumbing running everywhere gets in the way as well. Thanks for sharing your evolving perspective on home buying. Live and learn is a good mantra. That’s life on Earth right? Just a continuous stream of experiments. Some work out as expected. Some don’t. Others fall somewhere in between. You have a good attitude about it. Keep going. We’re all rooting for you!
Used the reclaimed brick as pavers for your back patio. It can go right on top of the concrete without any prep. That's what we did years ago for our Philly (Fairmount) rowhome.
First point, the intro- excellent summation, nice visual Second- the editing is really solid and it feels like you've developed a visual style As for the paper fragment, it looks like prewar German.
Thanks for your support! It feels good to improve the editing week over week, and find my voice. The consistent videos have been great practice, and I'm proud to have stuck to the goal of weekly updates so far!
The backstory on those demo guys would be amusing all by itself! Fond memories rekindled by this video of demo'ing my sister's row house.Thrills! Chills! Finding out that the lathe was a stressed structural member that, once removed, allowed the whole house to sway...
Really enjoying your thought processes as you adapt to change. Well done! We had a crew tear out half our unused 1913 chimney. It was holding up floor joists on the second floor, so we had to leave a lot. The space is used for hvac now.
You are on the right track! Architecture school is great for a wholistic understanding of how buildings are made. Hope you can learn a thing or two from my project!
These videos are really coming along! Great stuff. Liked the intro. I've been trying to get my wife to watch these with me since the beginning and I think that's what finally pulled her in. The preview for next week was a great addition too
It's so enjoyable watching all of that dirty work taking place from the comfort of my living room. That crew definitely worked hard for their pay, especially pulling down that old cast exhaust pipe up on the roof! Your camera placement and your editing work have been fantastic, making it that much more enjoyable to watch. Wishing you a Happy New Year, Chris.
Yea for Jordan, lol for Boing noises and yup, it's a German Newspaper. A bunch of Lutheran (mostly farmers) fleeing religious wars (1618-1648) in what's now Northern Germany in the late 17th century and arrived in PA mostly as indentured servants, who were auctioned off to established landholders. A bunch more arrived later including the Amish, Dunkards, Mennonites (often from Switzerland) and Moravians. I only know about these groups because I researched my nephew's awesome architect wife's family tree (and lol, we're related via Early Settlers of MA, boo it's thru the Witch Trials). Meanwhile, there's another bunch of Germans who migrated in the mid 19th century, some fleeing the failed Revolution of 1848, others later fleeing famine. I suspect that the Philadelphia Historical Society could match your newspaper bits, and likely has maps and pictures of your street. If the city has the names of former owners, the Historical Society could tell you who they were and from where they came. I wouldn't be surprised if an old German Lutheran family once lived there. ;)
Just rebuilding a porch was a daunting amount of work for me. Doing a whole house is a massive job for one (plus some help) person. I like that you illustrate your thought process in making and revising decisions. I look forward to seeing your choices from design to structure and finish work.
Taking up this project shows me you’re a rockstar, sir. Keep moving forward-it’s the best way. A project like this is a huge learning experience. I wish you much luck and a positive future.
My parents bought a early 1900 fixer-upper twin in Chesco when I was not yet a teen and through many long hours, months and years, they and my siblings renovated it to be our home. We took down horsehair plaster walls to put in electrical that was still knob-and-tube, plumbing and heating that never existed. We took down brick chimneys and removed I don't know how many layers of wallpaper in mutiple rooms. My dad started a handyman business a decade later and I helped him work on old Victorians in Chesco and an old rowhome 2 blocks from the Philly Art Museum one summer. I still hate doing drywall to this day because of it. I can smell this video.
Sad to see the old radiators go but forced air just makes sense, especially with all the walls open anyways, and with the addition of AC. Plus I'd never rest easy knowing all those old radiators could spring a leak and cause major damage.
Barbecue grill with the brick in your patio you can build your space and then put a countertop and drop in a premade grill or do what I did dismantle another grill and make it a drop in 😂
The little foreign scrap is common German newspaper print in "Schwabacher" font. Before the entry of the US into WW1 there have been a lot of German newspapers, schools and even universities, who were forced to shut down (in some regions they even burned the books from German libraries). It's about an accident with two people mortally wounded, obviously the family of one of them lived at 1001 ?????? Avenue, where they had a shop, living in the backroom. Then there is mentioned a house where part of it is rented out to others. On the left side are parts of a long sentence with words like condition, representative, indicated, king. Just try to photograph it with as little dust as possible. The cheap paper (out of wood) is very delicate because of the high amount of remaining lignin.
Hey man, will be watching! Wife and I restored our Victorian outside of Atlanta while we raised kids and built careers. Luckily, we enjoyed the process, 'cuz it was about thirty years. It's wonderful now to enjoy, and see how our plans worked.
Man, it feels like once you got those permits, things just started happening! Hang on to your bricks - you can do a patio (as others have mentioned) and also you'll have a supply of "native" bricks if you run into any issues if/when you have to repoint the brick walls. If you find some damaged or too-worn bricks, you'll have a ready supply of replacements that match. In my neighborhood, it's kind of obvious where repointing happened with "new" bricks next to the existing ones. Or worse--when people in the 60s and 70s decided that bricking up those grand old arched window openings and replacing the windows with smaller ones was the thing to do to save on heating. Also love the "boing" sound from the light fixture and hope it was a near-miss and not an actual clobber to your nugget! I love the way you're structuring the videos to show both your progress and your thought processes--it helps to see that you've had to backtrack and re-think things as you go (so many reno vids don't show this and it's sad because we love to see someone who's not only renovating, but responding to what the house is telling them, and a lot of people don't seem to get that second part).
This is the first video I’ve seen of yours. I love that you’re giving new life to those old, but good bones. Nice! -from Oklahoma, current population of 4.054 million. 😅
It's funny, I've always known radiators were modular/sectional, but I've never seen them actually come apart. And if that metal grate is anything like the tech used later, it's for "draining" ashes into a void under the fireplace to be collected from another port at the bottom of that section at a later time. Conjecture; I guess when fireburning fell out of favor as the way to actually heat your home, you made less ash and people were okay with scooping it out manually.
@@ChrisHytha During the early 1920's, there were 20 foreign language newspapers in Pittsburgh, many of them published daily. No doubt Philly had even more.
7:43 -- $3500 for a $6000 farm seems like a great deal (whenever and wherever that newspaper was published). But I can hardly fathom the current value of such a farm, especially on Mondays, when those cows might hear a notification bell and watch a Hytha rowhome demolition video. 🐄 🐄 laktierende Kühe!
Great seeing the demolition come along. I'm personally glad you got rid of the radiators, because they could have leaks or other issues, and also take up some (even if insignificant) valuable square footage.
Wow as someone very interested in the TH-cam side of things, this particular episode really blew up! Hope you can keep up the momentum, love every episode!
Hello. I’ve done a ton of rehab’s in Wilmington DE, when MBNA bought them all up for their future employees to live in. What I found most commonly was old news papers stuffed in the jams of the doors and windows. I guess for insolation or a time capsule. Sometimes I would find the carpenters name/dated and a coin. I’ve noticed on the higher end homes, the nicer ones we would find that more&more. As a trim carpenter and cabinet maker, I always leave something behind for someone in the future to find. I leave my name,year date and coins if I have any and sometimes I’ll say something like how the weather has been how much gas,milk,bread costs. Keep up the hard work! Looks like the easy stuff is right around the corner for ya…!😂💪🏼👍🏼😊
I love following this project. I felt bad to see the radiators removed as well, but it makes sense especially since you’re drastically altering the footprint of the home. And with your new system, you’ll get air conditioning as well as heat.
My man, the editing, your new comfortability infront of the camera. You’re growing and I love it!! Keep it up Chris!
Thank you! This one took like 15hr to edit. I am really proud so far of the consistency, doing a video a week for the past 21 weeks straight has been a great challenge, and I've grown quick for sure!
And humor: Keeping the tie rack and it tuns out-stairs are tiring!
@@dmwi1549 Lol that was an unintentional pun
I did some research on the ad “$6000 Farm For $3500”. It ran in the Philadelphia newspaper back in November, 1910.
Very cool! My suspicions were correct!
Thats 40 hectares of land for 3.5k??? So thats less that $90 per hectare.
We just sold some arable farm land in Poland a year ago for around $28k PER hectare. So 311 times more expensive.
Whole different part of the world but still the inflation or apreciation in price is insane.
I thought he said it was 100 acres farm…? Maybe a different one
@@KK001 ahem... inflation taken into account?
@@Knaeckebrotsaege nah thats why i said apreciation in price and not value.
13:17 ok, I don’t know why but that BOING sound effect when the light fixture fell, had me rolling!! 🤣
I really went all out with the sound effects (:
Same here 😂 don't hold back on sound effects in the future either!! 😊
@@aioni77 Good to know, more to come!
An old friend of mine had a sign in his room when he was a kid. It said "Work fascinates me... I can sit and watch it for hours..." That's pretty much what I'm doing here isn't it... 😆
Hahaha Thats how I feel too when I'm just filming a crew working and trying to stay out of the way
Yeah, I don't know what it is about watching others work. I can watch people in the trades all day and never get bored.
I saw this on another channel: three things that people can watch all day long: water moving, fire burning, and someone else working.
That’s the best way to enjoy your career. They call it upper management, in some places. 😅
yes that small piece of newspaper is german and the typeface is Breitkopf Fraktur if I'm not wrong, which was used until 1941
Thanks for the insight!
cool that you know the typeface :D
Yeap definitely German. So called “Altdeutsch”
Yeah, or simply "Fraktur" (Gothic Print). Cant read all words, but it seems to be about a "shop owner" something "who himself lives in a backroom while he was" something second.
This is German. If you scan these in, I and lots of others will be able to give you a translation of the text.
You better put in your own piece of newspaper too! Keep that tradition going :)
Tradition says to put a coin dated when the renovation takes place in the wall also :-) If I had a dollar for all the coins I've installed LOL
A brick patio in the backyard would be awesome. Also you could have some brick planters on the patio
Back in 1991 , I demolished an old chimney in my house in Denver . I cleaned all the bricks and used them for a path - between the house and the fence - on the
north side of the house . Since it never got sunshine , the bricks developed a nice , mossy covering over the next few years and it prevented the area from being muddy .
I hope you're saving those two panel doors. Even if you don't use them, I can guarantee somebody would appreciate you donating them to a habitat for humanity. I was happy to snag up seven of those from my local habitat because my home has an addition and it has different doors than the original build. And obviously the two panel doors have more character than the standard hollow cores that the addition has
I kept all the old solid core wood doors! I hope to strip the paint off and use them again!
@@ChrisHytha whoops, just see your answer to my "hope". That's great!
Speaking of Habitat for Humanity: THANK YOU PRESIDENT JIMMY CARTER for the best thing you ever did!
I could work like that in my 20’s, 30’s and early 40’s but man did I get exhausted just watching you work. 47 now amazing what just a few years does.
yes!
I'm helping. When I hold my finger on the screen, you work twice as fast.
This whole project is giving me flashbacks to gutting and renovating our 1910 home in the Philly suburbs. It's a ton of work to take down to the studs, but knowing there isn't any knob & tube behind the walls, termites, mold, etc. gives a lot of piece of mind. It's worth it in the long run. There are a few rooms where we retained the original plaster walls, etc. and honestly I regret not doing them while we were in demo mode.
The sound effect for the light falling out of the ceiling made my whole day.
Had to do it
I was just gonna say that too
It's the 'boing' for me!
Our home is 100 years younger than yours. We renovated the bathroom and kitchen 8 years ago and were thrilled to find all sorts of 'debris' under the old cabinets. A calender from a mechanic workshop, a xmas card, a plastic bead bracelet, and a few business cards. From the bathroom floor we pulled up a beer box, that was odd and had us scratching our heads. We also found evidence of a fire under the bathroom floor. More scratching of brainbox.
Excellent production, as always. Thanks, Chris. Every episode is amazing.
Thanks for your support! Thanks for sharing your findings. Always cool to see what is hidden in these houses
Ive been renovating my old 1800s townhome in Lancaster, PA this has been inspiring to watch and learn from! Thanks for all the episodes so far!
Good luck on your project!
Can you make a video on your house?
When we gutted and renovated our Victorian house in Montreal, we found newspaper in the walls as well. I sorted through them and had a selection arranged and framed. I really like it and it's a bit of the history of the house on display.
It is such a cool slice of life from a very different time. Thanks for sharing
I love that you're saving some of the original materials that are still good and usable. It really irks me how people nowadays just throw out everything, even if still in great usable condition, and it all just ends up in the dump for no reason. If anything, you can sell those old bricks to someone who's looking for something like that if you don't end up using it.
Hey Chris, this might be a late suggestion, but buy a wheelbarrow to haul all that debris around. They make 2 wheeled ones that are balanced in a way that you don't feel the load weight when lifting it to move it around. You can find them for less than 100 bucks if you search around.
Also, it hurts to hear what you paid for the home considering what it's going to cost to remodel it. However, you can't buy the education you will get with hands on experience on fully remodeling a home from scratch. Think of it as more education. After you're done, you're going to be a General Contractor with experience under your belt, which will open up opportunities for more work, and you can film that work and upload it to TH-cam, making money twice on it. See you next week, brother!
Yup! Also the value of this TH-cam channel factors into the equation. I don't regret it!
Loved the “boinggg” when the ceiling light fixture dropped 😂
Its the little things (:
Regarding proper tools: have you considered looking into whether Philadelphia has a tool library? Baltimore has one. Proper tools can make jobs far less painful and so much faster. It would be soooo worth it to join during a home renovation project (and definitely worth continuing to support beyond)
They do! West Philly Tool Library
God you took out all the charm that makes these historical buildings what they are.
what a travesty.
Trust me, I love historic details. Saving what I can. The house has bad termite damage, and even some of the historic trim was eaten through
When you were taking apart the enclosure, camera angles and shadows (and not paying attention) made it seem a solid wood floor - a closet, basically. When you started descending through the floor my mind was blown. A lot of great progress, thanks again for sharing!
It was my best magic trick. Thanks for watching!
Enjoying the transformation. Can't wait for next week.
Thanks for following along!
Bless your heart, you are such a hard worker!
You practically peeled that dry wall off, sorted and swept and sorted again! You’re doing great, honest video of a very messy project. Best wishes for a good week.
I think you arrived at the right answer for demo. Trim, framing and misc systems are good to go but doors/bricks will be valuable in the end
Cheers, glad you agree
Been loving this series so much! Really excited for everything that's coming :)
Thanks for your support!! Just got off the phone with the lumber yard, and soon we will be rebuilding! Can't wait
Slips, trips, and falls. 🎉 Gotta do a safetymeeting, you'd be surprised. 😂 Demo, gotta love it❣️ Great vlog, G.C. Chris.
Cheers, thank you!
So glad to hear you are salvaging the doors from the built-in!
My back hurt watching this and I wasn't even the one hauling bricks!
When I gutted my house in creston bc Canada I found newspaper from 1930. When I changed the water line I found 2 beer bottles, a whiskey bottle and a ketchup bottle from 1938. I also discovered it had been a one room cabin originally. The fun part of renovations. The designing was fun too
Thanks for sharing, I love piecing together the history of an old place like this
Cheers from Abbotsford!
Taking down drywall is such a dream after plaster!
It really is a treat
Your productions are getting better every week. Keep it up.
I bet it feels good to see some VISUAL progress happening, haha.
Thank you! It has been great practice forcing myself to do these weekly updates, definitely improving my editing process!
You may not want to use those bricks in reconstruction, but you could lay a really nice patio floor with them. Nicer than concrete. Or something to hide the chainlink fence. Demo is so much fun.
That is what I'm thinking regarding brick
9:28 Dude...that deep exhale, I felt that lol! Great work.
It was one of the first weeks that I had a solid 5 days of work on the house, now that most of the logistical work is done (permitting and plan drawing) I have more time to work!
It has been great watching this journey thus far! Thankyou for sharing!
Thanks for your support!
SHOUTOUT TO JORDAN!!!🥳
Good friend Jordan being a good friend
There’s something very therapeutic watching those demo guys go to town removing all that stuff
Dude you are making a huge physical contribution to this project!
Doing my best! Saved about $1,000 by doing the chimney myself
Glad you’re salvaging the doors. I def get it about the radiators. In theory it’s nice to think about keeping them to reflect the history of the house. But, in reality they take up a lot of space and all the plumbing running everywhere gets in the way as well. Thanks for sharing your evolving perspective on home buying. Live and learn is a good mantra. That’s life on Earth right? Just a continuous stream of experiments. Some work out as expected. Some don’t. Others fall somewhere in between. You have a good attitude about it. Keep going. We’re all rooting for you!
Used the reclaimed brick as pavers for your back patio. It can go right on top of the concrete without any prep. That's what we did years ago for our Philly (Fairmount) rowhome.
Just love your videos every week. They inspire me to get moving on my own projects. I can’t wait to see your house start to take shape. Nice work!
Thanks for your support!
First point, the intro- excellent summation, nice visual
Second- the editing is really solid and it feels like you've developed a visual style
As for the paper fragment, it looks like prewar German.
Thanks for your support! It feels good to improve the editing week over week, and find my voice. The consistent videos have been great practice, and I'm proud to have stuck to the goal of weekly updates so far!
Your best investment would be a cordless zawsaw. With the right blades it will make quick work of cutting through nails, studs, and anything else.
The backstory on those demo guys would be amusing all by itself! Fond memories rekindled by this video of demo'ing my sister's row house.Thrills! Chills! Finding out that the lathe was a stressed structural member that, once removed, allowed the whole house to sway...
Omg the old newspapers so cool
Really enjoying your thought processes as you adapt to change. Well done! We had a crew tear out half our unused 1913 chimney. It was holding up floor joists on the second floor, so we had to leave a lot. The space is used for hvac now.
I’ve been watching since the start, I want to do this type of stuff when I’m older, im going to be going to school for architecture next year
You are on the right track! Architecture school is great for a wholistic understanding of how buildings are made. Hope you can learn a thing or two from my project!
Look at those arch doorways!! I hope they have something like it somehow in that place when it's done.
Haha happy to see you invested in extra buckets for the bricks. It felt like doing 1 bucket at the time was slightly inefficient
The demo crew was nice enough to leave some for me! Really sped things up
Montage getting better and better! I'm cracking up at the boiniunoing at 13:16
Loved the karate back kick method of removing that bit of wall!
Learned that one in architecture school
These videos are really coming along! Great stuff. Liked the intro. I've been trying to get my wife to watch these with me since the beginning and I think that's what finally pulled her in. The preview for next week was a great addition too
Glad to hear you got her on board! Any plans for a Reno project of your own?
It's so enjoyable watching all of that dirty work taking place from the comfort of my living room. That crew definitely worked hard for their pay, especially pulling down that old cast exhaust pipe up on the roof! Your camera placement and your editing work have been fantastic, making it that much more enjoyable to watch. Wishing you a Happy New Year, Chris.
Thanks for your support! Happy holidays (:
Nice progress! Happy New Year and Cheers to the adventures to come.😻
Thanks for following along!
it always makes a day so much better when watching a video from this channel especially about this house its fun to watch
Yea for Jordan, lol for Boing noises and yup, it's a German Newspaper. A bunch of Lutheran (mostly farmers) fleeing religious wars (1618-1648) in what's now Northern Germany in the late 17th century and arrived in PA mostly as indentured servants, who were auctioned off to established landholders. A bunch more arrived later including the Amish, Dunkards, Mennonites (often from Switzerland) and Moravians. I only know about these groups because I researched my nephew's awesome architect wife's family tree (and lol, we're related via Early Settlers of MA, boo it's thru the Witch Trials). Meanwhile, there's another bunch of Germans who migrated in the mid 19th century, some fleeing the failed Revolution of 1848, others later fleeing famine. I suspect that the Philadelphia Historical Society could match your newspaper bits, and likely has maps and pictures of your street. If the city has the names of former owners, the Historical Society could tell you who they were and from where they came. I wouldn't be surprised if an old German Lutheran family once lived there. ;)
Just rebuilding a porch was a daunting amount of work for me. Doing a whole house is a massive job for one (plus some help) person. I like that you illustrate your thought process in making and revising decisions. I look forward to seeing your choices from design to structure and finish work.
I'm looking forward to next week's adventure!
Thanks for following along!
Taking up this project shows me you’re a rockstar, sir. Keep moving forward-it’s the best way. A project like this is a huge learning experience. I wish you much luck and a positive future.
Thanks for your support!
My parents bought a early 1900 fixer-upper twin in Chesco when I was not yet a teen and through many long hours, months and years, they and my siblings renovated it to be our home. We took down horsehair plaster walls to put in electrical that was still knob-and-tube, plumbing and heating that never existed. We took down brick chimneys and removed I don't know how many layers of wallpaper in mutiple rooms. My dad started a handyman business a decade later and I helped him work on old Victorians in Chesco and an old rowhome 2 blocks from the Philly Art Museum one summer. I still hate doing drywall to this day because of it. I can smell this video.
Great way to save some money Chris! A little manual labor never hurt anyone and I’m sure it felt great when you were done.
Sad to see the old radiators go but forced air just makes sense, especially with all the walls open anyways, and with the addition of AC. Plus I'd never rest easy knowing all those old radiators could spring a leak and cause major damage.
Barbecue grill with the brick in your patio you can build your space and then put a countertop and drop in a premade grill or do what I did dismantle another grill and make it a drop in 😂
Shout out to those tough buckets!! Great work!
And shout out to the demo guys for gifting me these extra buckets!
Glad I can live my demo of old house and redo it though your videos. :) great job.
Thanks for watching!!
The little foreign scrap is common German newspaper print in "Schwabacher" font. Before the entry of the US into WW1 there have been a lot of German newspapers, schools and even universities, who were forced to shut down (in some regions they even burned the books from German libraries).
It's about an accident with two people mortally wounded, obviously the family of one of them lived at 1001 ?????? Avenue, where they had a shop, living in the backroom. Then there is mentioned a house where part of it is rented out to others.
On the left side are parts of a long sentence with words like condition, representative, indicated, king.
Just try to photograph it with as little dust as possible. The cheap paper (out of wood) is very delicate because of the high amount of remaining lignin.
So nice to follow your big little project! (Impressive demolition crew, as well!)
Cheers, thanks for following along!
Hello from Christchurch New Zealand 👋
Thank God for friends!
Best wishes for a happy and healthy new year.
Omg, I didn’t even realize that was the same room you started taking the chimney down in! They demolished that area. I’m impressed.😳
Great job dude, very interesting renovation project
Thanks for your support!
Happy New Year from South Australia, Chris! 🎉
That music/brick smash match in the first 2 minutes! I hear you! 👌
Hey man, will be watching! Wife and I restored our Victorian outside of Atlanta while we raised kids and built careers. Luckily, we enjoyed the process, 'cuz it was about thirty years. It's wonderful now to enjoy, and see how our plans worked.
4:37 THIS WAS SO SATISFYING!
In the same boat but while having to work a full time job. The journey is definitely worth it!
Man, it feels like once you got those permits, things just started happening! Hang on to your bricks - you can do a patio (as others have mentioned) and also you'll have a supply of "native" bricks if you run into any issues if/when you have to repoint the brick walls. If you find some damaged or too-worn bricks, you'll have a ready supply of replacements that match. In my neighborhood, it's kind of obvious where repointing happened with "new" bricks next to the existing ones. Or worse--when people in the 60s and 70s decided that bricking up those grand old arched window openings and replacing the windows with smaller ones was the thing to do to save on heating.
Also love the "boing" sound from the light fixture and hope it was a near-miss and not an actual clobber to your nugget! I love the way you're structuring the videos to show both your progress and your thought processes--it helps to see that you've had to backtrack and re-think things as you go (so many reno vids don't show this and it's sad because we love to see someone who's not only renovating, but responding to what the house is telling them, and a lot of people don't seem to get that second part).
Coming along nicely
I genuinely have never seen a house as dusty as yours! So crazy lol 😅 great progress
Wildly dusty indeed
Uge progress ! Can’t wait to see the next videos 😊
Just remember this is Philly, so when you are done for the day take your tools with you.
Damn Chris, that wore me out. I'm going to go take a nap now. See you next week.
It was a loooooong week
I love those double doors next to the chimney you are removing. I hope that you can reuse them :)
They will make for a nice closet somewhere in the house! I hope to strip the paint off too and refinish them
7 years ago staying at a philly row home ABnB gave me motivation to gut and renovate my row home in Pa
This is the first video I’ve seen of yours. I love that you’re giving new life to those old, but good bones. Nice! -from Oklahoma, current population of 4.054 million. 😅
Saws all, chain saw, small jack hammer. Nothing beats iced and cheap tools for demo.
It's funny, I've always known radiators were modular/sectional, but I've never seen them actually come apart.
And if that metal grate is anything like the tech used later, it's for "draining" ashes into a void under the fireplace to be collected from another port at the bottom of that section at a later time. Conjecture; I guess when fireburning fell out of favor as the way to actually heat your home, you made less ash and people were okay with scooping it out manually.
6:41 Wow! Chris, this is incredible. I hope you keep these newspaper findings and frame them or make some sort of cool art out of this.
I definitely will! They are a cool piece of the story here!
@@ChrisHytha During the early 1920's, there were 20 foreign language newspapers in Pittsburgh, many of them published daily. No doubt Philly had even more.
7:43 -- $3500 for a $6000 farm seems like a great deal (whenever and wherever that newspaper was published).
But I can hardly fathom the current value of such a farm, especially on Mondays, when those cows might hear a notification bell and watch a Hytha rowhome demolition video.
🐄 🐄 laktierende Kühe!
on a jobsite slacking off watching another guy live in his jobsite 😎
This is the way
Great seeing the demolition come along. I'm personally glad you got rid of the radiators, because they could have leaks or other issues, and also take up some (even if insignificant) valuable square footage.
In a small house, with the 7 radiators it is pretty significant space savings!
@@ChrisHytha I definitely think you made the right choice.
Wow as someone very interested in the TH-cam side of things, this particular episode really blew up! Hope you can keep up the momentum, love every episode!
I think just adding the intro in the beginning really worked wonders with the youtube algorithm. It made the video more approachable for newcomers
You’ll be glad you kept those bricks!
PA in the house!! Let me come grab some of those bricks 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
Awesome work guys. Y’all gotta get some wheels under those buckets next time! Maybe a hand truck with pneumatic tires/stair guards.
Love the boing sound effect 13:20 !
that orange sweater guys is a beast
Renovating our 1930s house revealed a newspaper from 1936 and under some lino flooring, complete newspapers from the mid 1960s. It's a lot of fun.
Always cool to see what these houses are hiding
You’re really getting down to the bare bones! It’s going to be so great!
Excited to start rebuilding!
Hello. I’ve done a ton of rehab’s in Wilmington DE, when MBNA bought them all up for their future employees to live in. What I found most commonly was old news papers stuffed in the jams of the doors and windows. I guess for insolation or a time capsule. Sometimes I would find the carpenters name/dated and a coin.
I’ve noticed on the higher end homes, the nicer ones we would find that more&more.
As a trim carpenter and cabinet maker, I always leave something behind for someone in the future to find. I leave my name,year date and coins if I have any and sometimes I’ll say something like how the weather has been how much gas,milk,bread costs.
Keep up the hard work! Looks like the easy stuff is right around the corner for ya…!😂💪🏼👍🏼😊
I love following this project. I felt bad to see the radiators removed as well, but it makes sense especially since you’re drastically altering the footprint of the home. And with your new system, you’ll get air conditioning as well as heat.
Glad you understand!