Episode
Grand Designs: Revisited: The Derelict Barns, Devon
Overview
Revisited Season 2 (2002) episode 4 Kevin travels to the beautiful setting of south Devon to revisit Sue and Martin, whose dream was to create a family home using old English building techniques
Details
- Series
- Grand Designs
- Season
- Season 3
- Episode
- Episode 12
- Air date
- 2002-10-01
- Runtime
- 45 min
Episode context
Revisited: The Derelict Barns, Devon is Episode 12 in Season 3 of Grand Designs. It aired on 2002-10-01. The runtime is 45 min.
Previous / Next
Episode 11: Revisited: The Water Tower, Coleshill, Amersham
Revisited Season 2 (2002) episode 3
Kevin is in Amersham to update on a project taken on by Deborah and architect Andrew. Their venture involved designing an 'invisible' house that blended in with the surrounding reservoirs.
Episode 13: Revisited: The Cruciform House, Lambourn Valley, Berkshire
Revisited Season 3 (2003) episode 1
Kevin McCloud returns to the Lambourn Valley to meet a couple who took three years to finish building their home on the Berkshire Downs.
More episodes from this season
Episode 10: Revisited: The Dilapidated Georgian House, London
Revisited Season 2 (2002) episode 2
Kevin revisits Tony and Sharon, who fell in love with a completely dilapidated Georgian home in London and undertook the challenging task of restoring it to its former glory
Episode 14: Revisited: The House of Straw: 2nd Revisiting, Islington, North London
Revisited Season 3 (2003) episode 2
Kevin McCloud revisits the improbable Islington home of two architects who built their avant-garde north-east London house out of straw bales, springs, nappy cladding and silver tin
Episode 9: Revisited: The Isolated Cottage, Brecon Beacons, Wales
Revisited Season 2 (2002) episode 1
Kevin McCloud revisits Adrian and Corrina, who decided their first home was to be a 300-year-old ruin. The former cottage is set in the inhospitable climate of the Brecon Beacons National Park.
Episode 15: Revisited: The Former Electricity Sub-Station, Sunderland
Revisited Season 3 (2003) episode 3
Kevin McCloud catches up with a couple he met some years when they set about the task of converting a disused electricity substation in Sunderland into a four-bed family home
Episode 8: The Traditional Cottage, Herefordshire
Merry's family have been Herefordshire builders for generations, so she knew that the county was rich in traditional building crafts. She and Ben decided to combine these with technology for a new house with a genuinely rural feel. Her father drew up a design that followed the traditional cottage layout while incorporating modern comforts.
Episode 16: Revisited: The English Barn, Berkshire
Revisited Season 3 (2003) episode 4
Kevin McCloud revisits retired couple Denys and Marjorie Randolph from Berkshire, who had decided to embark on their final building project, a brand new, green oak, barn-style house
Episode 7: The Underground House, Cumbria
The old quarry stood on a slope of the Eden valley and commanded beautiful views. Local architect John Bodger designed a two-storey house that burrowed backwards into the rock and made maximum use of natural resources for light, warmth and power.
Episode 6: The Terrace Conversion, Hackney, London
After 10 years of living in a small house in east London, John and Eleni hankered after modern, open-plan living. They didn't want to move, so they decided to give their Victorian terrace home a radical redesign. The house was in a conservation area, so the outside had to remain unchanged. Inside, however, they decided to rip out everything including walls, ceilings, floors and start again.
Episode 5: Inverted Roof-House, Buckinghamshire
Tom and Judy wanted more than just a home for themselves and their two children. On a site of outstanding natural beauty in Buckinghamshire, they set out to build an ambitious house - a symphony of angles, glass walls and exposed steel, with a dramatic inverted roof. Tom made himself site manager and main contractor. He had no experience but he liked a challenge - and, after all, how difficult could it be?
Episode 4: The Victorian Threshing Barn, Surrey
For Philip and Angela, the build was part of a life change that had begun two years earlier. Just after their second daughter was born, Philip fell seriously ill, prompting the family to leave London and move back to his parents' village. Acquiring the site was easy, as Philip's parents owned it. Getting planning permission took longer, and a crucial factor in their success was that they would be restoring the outside of the barn and keeping the innovation hidden.