
An imposing detached brick built property in the heart of Leeds, that had been split in to 4 separate substantial luxury apartments, with the client owning the first floor and basement areas.
A substantial detached property in the heart of Northallerton featuring a 2 room cellar with storage corridors. Our client wanted to achieve a dry warm space for a band rehearsal room, essentially a music room.
A traditional brick built detached property with large cellar areas, the client wanted to increase the size of his property and develop the basement to include two bedrooms and a bathroom / shower area.
A Victorian end terrace property with large basement areas that had previously had an unsuccessful conversion by the previous owners to a garage area, leaving the property with an unusable steep drive that would not allow a vehicle to access the garage without getting stuck on the drive way.
Following a previous contractors sub standard works Barrett Kent stripped out the previous contractors membrane system and concrete floor and started again!!
A small existing basement requiring subfloor dig out, underpinning and flat roof single storey extension to enlarge into a spacious studio apartment.
An extremely wet cellar area with running water to existing man hole in basement floor requiring the full Barrett Kent cellar system, installing a comprehensive drainage management sump and pump system.
A small three roomed unusable flooding cellar Barrett Kent removed two dividing walls inserted structural steels and re trimmed the floor joists to allow a flat uninterrupted ceiling hiding the rsj beams within the ceiling voids.
A detached dwelling built in to the side of a hill with the benefit of integral double garage and 3 room cellars.
A traditional terraced property with the benefit of a 1 room cellar area with internal staircase.
A typical terraced stone and brick built town house with the benefit of 3 roomed cellar areas. A sump and submersible pump had been fitted many years ago which was not managing to keep the water at bay.
A basement conversion which was already in use but in poor repair and partially tanked some years ago. The basement had previously flooded due to road works and had been tanked using cavity drainage membrane on the front elevation but was failing and causing the adjoining walls to wick the ingress of water through the plasterboard.