I Bought A 1930s Flat!

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 23. 08. 2022
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Komentáƙe • 1,4K

  •  Pƙed rokem +368

    [AD] helloooo get 4 months of NordVPN for free on a 2-year plan here: NordVPN.com/karolina 💃it’s risk free with Nord’s 30 day money-back guarantee!

    • @kaylag9579
      @kaylag9579 Pƙed rokem +2

      What about a utility sink instead of bathroom then you can save the pantry?

    • @esgee3829
      @esgee3829 Pƙed rokem +1

      do you like the way yt renders film grain?

    • @iyawakarehen
      @iyawakarehen Pƙed rokem +5

      curious about what french tv shows you so wanted to watch tho 😂😂

    • @MonkeyspankO
      @MonkeyspankO Pƙed rokem +5

      The basement tools/junk look like a treasure to the right kind of person who appreciates that sort of thing.

    • @victorrossi2601
      @victorrossi2601 Pƙed rokem

      Karolina you are Pretty

  • @Gugunet26
    @Gugunet26 Pƙed rokem +9698

    Karolina trying to trick us into believing she just bought this flat, and she didn't already own it since it was built in the 1930's cause she lived in it

    • @Timetravel1111
      @Timetravel1111 Pƙed rokem +105

      Right?! My home 🏡 is from 1927 and my husband and like they details like 2 cabinet built ins, fireplace that we use, tye mantle for Halloween 🎃 đŸ‘» decor. We see tack marks where the wood floors were covered with carpet, now restored. Cove molding. Yet there’s issues.

    • @blackstarninja6785
      @blackstarninja6785 Pƙed rokem +377

      Oh, I believe she bought it recently, I also believe she cheekily bought it because she lived there in the 1930's and has a bit of nostalgia for her old digs...

    • @mrflibble3226
      @mrflibble3226 Pƙed rokem +28

      Fucking stop @whaaa t

    • @ketaminepoptarts
      @ketaminepoptarts Pƙed rokem +56

      @@mrflibble3226 report the bots instead of replying

    • @mrflibble3226
      @mrflibble3226 Pƙed rokem +12

      Or I can do both.

  • @inkakoutna7155
    @inkakoutna7155 Pƙed rokem +5286

    I was in Poland for the 3rd time in my life this weekend. I was walking around the city and I was thinking how funny it would be to run into Karolina. Then I was like "Don't be absurd. Do you how big Poland is, how could you run into her?!" .....
    Not even five minutes have passed since that though and I see a beautiful tall lady in vintage clothes walking to me. Thank you for taking a photo with me. It really made my day 💜 Congratulations to being a home owner. So cool to accomplish this at such a young age 🎉🎉🎉

    • @Chahlie
      @Chahlie Pƙed rokem +247

      Oh my goodness, what fun! Lucky you :)

    • @agnieszkabatyra4332
      @agnieszkabatyra4332 Pƙed rokem +108

      Wow such a nice story ❀

    • @babe8917
      @babe8917 Pƙed rokem +91

      That is so awesome. You manifested it

    • @SnabbKassa
      @SnabbKassa Pƙed rokem +189

      Probably best that I didn't see her the last time I was there. Very hard not to propose marriage immediately. "Let's live in an 18th century grand house together" etc.

    • @Gr95dc
      @Gr95dc Pƙed rokem +30

      aww what a nice coincidence

  • @rylraven13
    @rylraven13 Pƙed rokem +2311

    I want this to be a whole series. Two of my favorite things: home renovations and Karolina just being her sassy self

    • @TheFebgw
      @TheFebgw Pƙed rokem +4

      Exactly!

    • @brinagotsued
      @brinagotsued Pƙed rokem +4

      Yes, please!

    • @buttersofi
      @buttersofi Pƙed rokem +11

      Exactly my thoughts, PLUS she has great style to do stuff so I know this flat is going to come out amazing

    • @geminievil
      @geminievil Pƙed rokem +1

      Since she didn't make an official playlist yet I made this one to go updating as she posts
      czcams.com/play/PLZrVbzd3XCOsA8-5BZRHrXFK1gCO4FFEV.html

    • @CERTIFIEDED_TOEsniffer
      @CERTIFIEDED_TOEsniffer Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

      ​​@@geminievilyou.are.a.legend:v

  • @waedidmyhandlechange
    @waedidmyhandlechange Pƙed rokem +213

    This completes the trifecta
    - Bernadette's NY sewing room and London flat renovations
    - Micarah's RV and house renovations
    - and now, Karolina's 30's flat renovations
    Looking forward to how this'll turn out!

    • @TheSolitaryGrape
      @TheSolitaryGrape Pƙed rokem +28

      Also Rachel Maksy's recent farmhouse adventures!

    • @stefl2852
      @stefl2852 Pƙed rokem

      Oh would someone please give me the links for these? We are renovation an old house and I'd love to have some inspiration!

    • @ms.dee_
      @ms.dee_ Pƙed rokem +6

      @@stefl2852
      - Bernadette's NY sewing room and London flat renovations - czcams.com/video/d32Ypfz_5TM/video.html / czcams.com/video/d3hdx-4bpIU/video.html
      - Micarah's RV and house renovations - czcams.com/video/hti87p_aT7I/video.html
      - Rachel Maksy's - czcams.com/video/pNNaaPIgyho/video.html / czcams.com/video/HKvLWNUa_sA/video.html / czcams.com/video/0vBfMDwEG4Y/video.html

    • @artpai7665
      @artpai7665 Pƙed rokem

      and also WithWendy! She has a whole series about renovating her new house

    • @Reticence9zen924
      @Reticence9zen924 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

      Wow Bernadette Banner is Transatlantic?!

  • @MissRedLu
    @MissRedLu Pƙed rokem +899

    "Because post pandemic shortages are no joke"
    As someone who is also renovating her first apartment (built in 1956), I feel you, sister. I feel you in the deepest, darkest ,and most desperate corner of my soul. I feel validated, I feel seen.

    • @Emppu_T.
      @Emppu_T. Pƙed rokem +2

      And all because we had severe lockdowns.

    • @GoingtoHecq
      @GoingtoHecq Pƙed rokem

      @@Emppu_T. Because people should die for your convenience.

    • @nonniperkl6273
      @nonniperkl6273 Pƙed rokem +13

      @@Emppu_T. well at least some lives got saved

    • @joylox
      @joylox Pƙed rokem +5

      Lots of delays for lots of reasons. I've been waiting for flooring to replace some nasty 1970s carpet, but the people who were supposed to be putting it in got sick for a week, and that delayed stuff. Thankfully most of the things I needed I had, or could get from the family business, but I'll be glad when my floors are in so I can arrange furniture.

    • @lishan4657
      @lishan4657 Pƙed rokem +1

      666 likes, no joke

  • @LennyCartwright
    @LennyCartwright Pƙed rokem +340

    "Damn, those are some fine folding doors" - a sentence only Karolina could utter.

  • @valerianabathory
    @valerianabathory Pƙed rokem +617

    The flat you've got sounds exactly like the one we recently moved out of: 90+ years old (survived WWII bombardment, actually), folding doors, floor plan where you just walk from one room into the next, tiny little bathroom not actually designed for anyone to be bathing in, and so on. The only difference is our old wooden floors hadn't been covered by anything and were thus extremely creaky, along with the entire rest of the building - the downstairs neighbors' dryer spinning felt like an earthquake haha. Our landlord kicked us out when he decided to sell the place, but it was certainly an... experience to live in. Best of luck with the renovation process and overcoming as many of the perils of old Eastern European housing as you can!

    • @cottonsheep2367
      @cottonsheep2367 Pƙed rokem +48

      actually, the whole walking-from-room-to-room thing was in a sense invented by bauhaus at the end of the 1920s, so flats from around that time to be built like that is not too unlikely. I think is is so awesome to see design in action from 100 years ago! I would like to live in a piece of design history myself, so I am happy you got to have that experience.

    • @Justinya0
      @Justinya0 Pƙed rokem +4

      @@cottonsheep2367 Houses have this too! My house is (probably) 100 years old and had this too. We eventually got rid of the extra doors tho.
      Edit: I live on the west of Poland, this part of my country was actually in Germany before the war, so that explains it.

  • @itisyerdad
    @itisyerdad Pƙed rokem +50

    I am so happy you blurred your windows. It's such a smart move. Congratulations on buying a flat! I also just bought a flat, too. Very proud of you!

  • @kittymervine6115
    @kittymervine6115 Pƙed rokem +1212

    we wanted a smaller house in a great location, and no one had renovated the kitchen. I know what kind of kitchen I wanted. (I'm not into cooking, so I wanted few cabinets and wanted to make it simple and white). And of course everyone renovated their kitchens before putting them on sale. Finally the agent knew someone wanted to sell their home, and they were "Well we have to renovate the kitchen" and the agent was, "I know a buyer and they'll buy the house NOW as they do not want a renovated kitchen". I love my kitchen I did myself!

    • @zeldamorgan9260
      @zeldamorgan9260 Pƙed rokem +84

      I hear that! I wanted a 1920s house that hadn't had the space "opened up" by removing walls like they love to do in the States. I wanted that separated kitchen. Finally found it during the pandemic when a guy who didn't cook was desperate to sell. I'm not changing anything!

    • @bagandbroad
      @bagandbroad Pƙed rokem +24

      That makes me happy to hear, I find it so stressful to imagine all the broken cosmetic things I have to do before selling. Maybe someone wants that

    • @blackstarninja6785
      @blackstarninja6785 Pƙed rokem +65

      The amount of beautiful craftsman houses here that people paint all of the woodwork and fireplaces white and open up the walls and "modernize" the kitchen to sell it....ughharghh

    • @emmao6578
      @emmao6578 Pƙed rokem +40

      @@blackstarninja6785 ughharghh indeed, the trend for covering up all the nice woodwork and painting every single thing white saddens me

    • @zeldamorgan9260
      @zeldamorgan9260 Pƙed rokem +21

      @@blackstarninja6785 Oh i know! Unfortunately all the beautiful woodwork in my house is already painted, but at least it's still here, and all the art glass windows haven't been replaced with vinyl.

  • @vintagecameragirl
    @vintagecameragirl Pƙed rokem +1354

    Congratulations!
    Old homes are the best, the history, the quirks, the random creeks in the night.
    My home is 170 years old, and only had a bathroom put into it in the 1980s. The outside toilet is still in my shed hooked up.
    European living, am I right?

    • @Timetravel1111
      @Timetravel1111 Pƙed rokem +18

      What?! None put a toilet đŸšœ in till 1980s ha ha what luxury! 🛀

    • @vintagecameragirl
      @vintagecameragirl Pƙed rokem +28

      @@Timetravel1111 I know right, my uncles house still only has an outside toilet. It's attached to the side of the house.
      The house I moved into about 5 years ago had a shed attached to the side of the house, and that was the bathroom. No heating in the house either.
      We only lived there a year :/

    • @SnabbKassa
      @SnabbKassa Pƙed rokem +5

      *creaks
      "get into those nooks and creekies"

    • @ms_it_is
      @ms_it_is Pƙed rokem +27

      My house used to be a stable in the 1800 (it was build 1818), so it wasnt even intendet to be a home in the first place. At some point in the 20. Century somebody decided to move in there and began to transform it. I'm living here for 18 years now and renovated a lot myself (like the kitchen and bathroom and I transformed the attic into bedrooms) but it still has some of the 1818 stable quirks, like a hook used for hanging the pig carcasses that I now use for bags or the walls that made up the pig pen are now surrounding the dining area

    • @Widdekuu91
      @Widdekuu91 Pƙed rokem +12

      I'm highly allergic to old homes, not only do I not fit into them (regularly scraped my scalp on friends' houses that had very old homes) but I tend to have nightmares about former residents. Like a restructured orphanage, where I slept and had a nightmare about a kid that climbed the foodcabinets and screamed all the time, like she was possessed. I prefer new homes, it feels more silent there, if you know what I mean.

  • @TikoVerhelst
    @TikoVerhelst Pƙed rokem +672

    Karolina, why are you able to get me interested in sh*t I thought I'd never give a damm about?
    First fashion, and now RENOVATING A HOUSE!?!?!?!?
    Seriously, I think you're the only person with the power to get me interested in these kinds of things. :)

    • @HotSzejk
      @HotSzejk Pƙed rokem +1

      Cute đŸ„°

    • @kristianbjrnjensen5388
      @kristianbjrnjensen5388 Pƙed rokem +14

      Try Rachel Maksy. She is good at making almost anything interesting. She moved earlier this year and made some fascinating vlogs on that.

    • @kristianbjrnjensen5388
      @kristianbjrnjensen5388 Pƙed rokem

      Try Rachel Maksy.

    • @jamestolson2804
      @jamestolson2804 Pƙed rokem

      Explain things and make it interesting

    • @CERTIFIEDED_TOEsniffer
      @CERTIFIEDED_TOEsniffer Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

      ​​@@kristianbjrnjensen5388ok I will try Rachel Maksy, ty for informing me:)

  • @SuzMDenem
    @SuzMDenem Pƙed rokem +391

    I could literally smell the basement from memory 😂 It is so refreshing to see a "real" old flat, like Central European old... It feels familiar, my grandparents lived in a flat with similar vibes to it. Must the the 60's socialist charm lol
    Greetings from Hungary!

  • @freedomthroughspirit
    @freedomthroughspirit Pƙed rokem +295

    "Polish Ham for Every Home" 😂🍖🏠 BUT seriously, what a fabulous adventure! There's nothing like having your own space and customizing it. Congratulations! 🌟🌈💃

  • @janleonard3101
    @janleonard3101 Pƙed rokem +339

    My first apartment was built in the '20s. This was in the US and these fourplexes were built to be low cost housing for WWI veterans. It had tiny closets and a large bathtub, ceramic tile in the bathroom and on the kitchen counters and lower half of the wall. There were little art deco details here and there and I lived there in the early '90s so a lot of the original features were still there and untouched. I loved living in a place with a sense of history like that.

    • @paulwaltersheherfeministvl521
      @paulwaltersheherfeministvl521 Pƙed rokem

      OH NOOOOOOOO!!! I have two girlfriends, but very few people on YT are happy for my relationship success. They disl*ke all of the videos I make with my 2 girlfriends. Please be kind, dear jan

    • @burdistan
      @burdistan Pƙed rokem +3

      is it not normal to have tiles in the bathroom in the US?

    • @janleonard3101
      @janleonard3101 Pƙed rokem +4

      @@burdistan Not in cheap apartments like mine was, but in houses it's pretty normal. Although in the house where I live now the bathroom floors are vinyl but the shower wall is tiled.

    • @elisabethmontegna5412
      @elisabethmontegna5412 Pƙed rokem +4

      My husband and I lived in a couple of places like that in the late 90s, early 2000s. I miss those huge bathtubs
.

    • @janleonard3101
      @janleonard3101 Pƙed rokem +3

      @@elisabethmontegna5412 Me too. I made sure to have a nice soak every Sunday afternoon and I could almost swim in it. That was lovely. 🛁

  • @thetachiban57
    @thetachiban57 Pƙed rokem +87

    As someone who grew up in many fixer upper homes, (a few of which were a century old) I can only in good conscience say buyer beware. It might seem like a nice dream to want to get yourself a vintage space and clean it up and modernize it, but in almost all cases these projects can take years and beyond that often still have deeper structural issues, some of which are impossible to address. I'm not saying don't chase your dreams, absolutely do. I will always cheer on anyone who decides to take on this kind of challenge... but be very careful, do your research, think ahead, be wise and be reasonable and have a solid plan because it's going to have to be your home.

  • @hsimpson6581
    @hsimpson6581 Pƙed rokem +50

    My favorite part is when the renovation manager told you no and you fired him! You’re awesome!

  • @kpwxx
    @kpwxx Pƙed rokem +340

    F in the chat for the pantry. I love pantries too but I have to admit a bathroom is definitely more important.
    Your plans all sound amazing, can't wait to see the finished flat! And I think you're doing ok time wise with the amount that needed doing. We've still not don't everything in our house after five years, and we're now selling it lol.

  • @vsb101
    @vsb101 Pƙed rokem +166

    As a person who has been renovating destroyed apartment (cat's fecies smeared on walls and black spiderwebs in the corners, not mentioning rusty pipes) for about a year and a half, i'm so proud of you!

    • @kneau
      @kneau Pƙed rokem +7

      Here's hoping those spiderwebs are not sticky!

    • @WaterNai
      @WaterNai Pƙed rokem +12

      @@kneau I’d be more worried about the cat feces than the spiderwebs. đŸ€ą

    • @dshe8637
      @dshe8637 Pƙed rokem

      @@WaterNai yes

    • @vsb101
      @vsb101 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@WaterNai it was very stinky
      It smelled about a month before we've found all the sources of odor

  • @anneroth7176
    @anneroth7176 Pƙed rokem +36

    I just found you and am delighted by your content. Perhaps delighted is the wrong word for your moving video "what's happening in Poland right now". I am a US citizen aged 81 and though I have traveled a lot I have never been to Poland. Thank you for sharing parts of your life and for giving me a glimpse of Poland past and present. I am looking forward to your new home renovation.

  • @Teajay21
    @Teajay21 Pƙed rokem +13

    My grandparents had a house of a similar age they bought it in the 1950s but it was built earlier. The most distinctive thing was the secret room in my aunts (later my) room. It was basically storage under the eaves of the house but it had a tiny door that was hidden by a dresser. It always felt like the kind of place that a young governess in a gothic horror novel would discover some horrible secret.

  • @user-wi2vn7cu4w
    @user-wi2vn7cu4w Pƙed rokem +202

    I was honoured to be invited to my friend's flat in the centre of KrakĂłw. It's an old house and family is trying to preserve the past of this house and flat is looking really unique and beautiful. Especially i love the mix of many generations and their furniture, cutlery etc.

  • @kittymervine6115
    @kittymervine6115 Pƙed rokem +331

    we added those exact doors to most of the house. We had to get them from a company in Chicago that makes them from real wood, but you have to paint and finish. The outside is 1950's but, when people come inside they are "well, this wasn't expected!" Also the trim, we aged the inside as much as possible! I love this story also, it's every renovation story!

    • @kikihammond5326
      @kikihammond5326 Pƙed rokem +8

      What is the door company? I have an old house and someone renovated and took out all the old doors except the back door which is just decrepit. I'd love to put "old" doors back in.

    • @idkwuzgoinon
      @idkwuzgoinon Pƙed rokem +2

      @@kikihammond5326 same! Let us know if/when you find out

    • @PsychoKat90
      @PsychoKat90 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@kikihammond5326 ditto on the doors! Just want to check them out since I'm in Chicago.

    • @michellebyrom6551
      @michellebyrom6551 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@kikihammond5326 it's worth checking how much a local carpenter would charge. Not all doors are the same height or width, then there's shipping and installation costs. Sometimes bespoke is cheaper, refer to it as made to measure. Bespoke should really mean unique rather than fitted.

  • @syedammarkhalid3695
    @syedammarkhalid3695 Pƙed rokem +8

    I myself live in a 1960s apartment, we have fixed it up great and honestly from the inside it doesn't look that old, except when you go in the backyard and look at the building from the outside. the backyard is tiled for some reason, and the tiles are no joke marble and granite, except that it isn't polished, and the landlord hasn't kept the building in great condition from the outside, I rlly wish they did cuz like it's a beautiful piece of pure Muslim and Saudi Arabian architecture. The railings on the balcony are stained glass, the stairs and floors are all marble and granite.

  • @MsFitz134
    @MsFitz134 Pƙed rokem +99

    I've been looking at old farmhouses in the US and many of them also have the bathroom in the kitchen. Back before indoor plumbing most people bathed in a big tub in the kitchen, so it probably didn't seem strange to them when they got plumbing to just slap a bathtub right there. (Plus, they wouldn't need to add pipes all through the house)
    But as someone who has only lived in modern homes, the idea of bathing in (or next to) the kitchen is one I don't know if I could get used to. It's my number one hindrance to buying an old house.

    • @guidethewaywithnatally7979
      @guidethewaywithnatally7979 Pƙed rokem +10

      I lived in a house in Kalamazoo, Michigan built in 1880 and the bathroom door was off the kitchen next to the oven. We ended moving because my 4 children were convinced it was haunted. I thought the house was awesome!

    • @lizzyv9754
      @lizzyv9754 Pƙed rokem +5

      My 122 year old house also has a bathroom a door away from the kitchen 😂 it is only a half bath but has the massive linen closet that would totally make sense if people were bathing in the kitchen.

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 Pƙed rokem +2

      Plenty of old tenement-style apartments in New York City (plus other American cities) also had the bathtub in the kitchen. Many of these still retain the same setup...

  • @CalamityJo
    @CalamityJo Pƙed rokem +167

    It reminds me of my grandma's house. It was a little cottage built in 1901. It had had a lot of weird quirks, including a door to nowhere hidden behind the fridge and an after thought of the bathroom. And the electricity was nuts. you could pop the circuit breaker by taking a shower with more than one light on. No heating ducts so you had to have all the doors open inside to heat everything. It was my first place though! (Grandma was living with my aunt and somebody needed to live there) Later on my mom ended up with the house after Grandma passed (at 100 years old!). She ran into similar renovation woes as you have, especially with the floor!! But with enough persistence and compromises we got it done. We found a lot of cool artifacts too, including old bottles and tins from the 1920s. Some very old posters we ended up framing.
    No matter how frustrating things are now, you will love the end result. It will be wonderful to see what it's like finished. And when you can start decorating!

    • @delphine1001
      @delphine1001 Pƙed rokem +10

      It is interesting to notice that people could live so old with that lack of comfort. Maybe because their bodies were more resistant, I don't know, but I have the same case in my family in law, an old aunt who passed away at 108 and still worked in a garden a few days before her death and lived in a very old raw house.

  • @sewcialanxietea1021
    @sewcialanxietea1021 Pƙed rokem +125

    Such a lovely, bright space! And those huge windows and glass doors! Oh, the light for your hobbies and projects! It's beautiful!

  • @missaliasaurora
    @missaliasaurora Pƙed rokem +75

    I see exactly why you loved the place, and yet I would never torture myself by buying a place in this condition (no offense! You are very brave!) The windows, walls and floor, which I thought would be the main issues, turned out to be the easiest part of fixing this place up. I used to have a place that was built in 1922 and then when they went to renovate, they just added on to the back of the house. Not once, not twice, but at least 3 times over the years, judging by the seams in the flooring. The house was loooooong, it just went on and on! We had to pay $15k USD to put steel supports under the house because it was sagging. You could stand on the 1920s part of the house and jump on the floor and feel the house squish under you. And I thought that was a scary story! We were very lucky, because the previous owners had already done the difficult part: the kitchen and bathroom was funny and L-shaped, and the "balcony" was like 20cm, which means they had already made the difficult decisions you gotta make to fit modern appliances into older homes.
    My favorite funny thing about my old house was that the part built in the early 2000s/late 90s had a laundry room, and it was MASSIVE, like literally larger than your bedroom in your new flat, and I liked to imagine the same people who did the kitchen reno were putting in the laundry room later, and they were like "we have to make sure that what happened to us, never happens again. Whenever someone invents a new household appliance that takes up a bunch of space, it's going in here, dammit!"
    Side question: The worms, eeww, how does that happen? Were they hoarders? Was the place sat empty for a long time?

    • @pomaranczowaszarlotka
      @pomaranczowaszarlotka Pƙed rokem +6

      Regarding the dead worms, I think it was just wet and warm under the linoleum. Also a lot of tasty soggy plywood to eat. I think the worms were in the kitchen so there might been some scraps of food falllng there.
      And yeah, the flat was probably empty for years, bc it would be impossible to live in Poland with windows in such condition. It's too cold for half a year

    • @fjr4205
      @fjr4205 Pƙed rokem +2

      Your story about the steel supports is terrifying to me because my house has a crappy addition and I think it is sagging 😅 rip to my savings

  • @lubiekocyki
    @lubiekocyki Pƙed rokem +38

    whoaa i'm so happy for you! always loved the kamienica vibes, i'm also renovating an old flat in ƁódĆș, but by some miracle it was in much better condition AND IT HAS THE OLD OAK HERRINGBONE FLOORS *.* I'm so pumped to see what you will do with your space, i'm assuming it will be wildly amazing, vintage and original, can't wait for more of this content!!

  • @aisadal2521
    @aisadal2521 Pƙed rokem +112

    Let's give it up for our vintage queen evolving into her new form - aesthetic goddess đŸ„°

  • @DOSBoxMom
    @DOSBoxMom Pƙed rokem +158

    In the USA, massive renovation jobs like this are sometimes called "the money pit". (There's a movie by that name, and the movie "Mouse Hunt" has many of the same "money pit" elements.)

    • @Gr95dc
      @Gr95dc Pƙed rokem +14

      Mouse hunt is a movie I haven't heard from in years! One of my faves as a kid

    • @DOSBoxMom
      @DOSBoxMom Pƙed rokem +8

      @@Gr95dc It's become a Thanksgiving tradition at our house to watch Mouse Hunt in the afternoon, after the turkey dinner. (Although it doesn't seem to have anything at all to do with Thanksgiving.)

    • @jordanblankjordanblank4603
      @jordanblankjordanblank4603 Pƙed rokem +1

      I love both of those movies!

    • @karimkirsch2673
      @karimkirsch2673 Pƙed rokem +10

      I don’t really think this a massive renovation. She’s essentially replacing windows, doing some dry wall and adding a kitchen and bathroom.

    • @Gr95dc
      @Gr95dc Pƙed rokem +3

      @@DOSBoxMom that's such a cute unrelated tradition to have

  • @KelsieJG__they-them
    @KelsieJG__they-them Pƙed rokem +5

    I don't know if you ended up considering this, but my apartment also has a very small kitchen and I decided to just not have a dishwasher. Especially living alone, and you said you don't cook much, you get used to just doing all the dishes by hand in the sink. I live alone and do cook often and a dishwasher is still not something I miss having.

  • @cassandralyris4918
    @cassandralyris4918 Pƙed rokem +19

    As someone who has renovated a couple 1920's homes here in the Us I can relate. The quirks are a part of the charm. Sometimes you have to work with them rather than go against them.

  • @ms_it_is
    @ms_it_is Pƙed rokem +39

    My house used to be a stable in the 1800 (it was build 1818), so it wasnt even intendet to be a home in the first place. At some point in the 20. Century somebody decided to move in there and began to transform it. I'm living here for 18 years now and renovated a lot myself (like the kitchen and bathroom and I transformed the attic into bedrooms) but it still has some of the 1818 stable quirks, like a hook they once used for hanging the pig carcasses, that I now use for bags. Or the walls that made up the pig pen are now surrounding the dining area

    • @nelliebly6616
      @nelliebly6616 Pƙed rokem +2

      I also live in a "Pig Pen"😆
      With arching ceilings and stable windows...
      but now configurated into a Studio...with kitchen , half walls and a modern bathroom đŸ„ł

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 Pƙed rokem +2

      There's a unit in the lane where I live which was once a hay loft & stables. Originally, horses would be kept on the ground floor with the upper floor used for storing goods, hay, and fodder. It even has the original beam hoist & external barn doors on the upper floors. However, it hasn't been well maintained & parts of it are slowly crumbling. The current occupant is a musician, and the previous ones were a Cambodian migrant family, and before them... a group of Indian men who worked as delivery riders.

  • @gunstarheroine5173
    @gunstarheroine5173 Pƙed rokem +27

    brb watching every single video in Karolina's channel three times so she can pay off this renovation

  • @MardieMar
    @MardieMar Pƙed rokem +28

    Ahh I love it so much, it's a diamond in the rough! There's many little details that remind me of my own 1930s home, like the giant holes in the walls to put the central heating through. Also 20 doors in 1 home. Anyway can't wait to see how you're going to make it your own!

  • @babycarrots5622
    @babycarrots5622 Pƙed rokem +2

    aaaaaaaa it looks so nice already i can't wait to see updates !!!!! and yes the doors are amazing! also rly excited to see it properly furnished :)) good luck on your journey!!

  • @ava8340
    @ava8340 Pƙed rokem +125

    wow honestly that’s a GORGEOUS apartment and you’re so lucky that you spotted it. well done for figuring everything out and good luck with it in the future! it looks magical and i’m sure it’s going to end up even better when everything’s finally finished

  • @NataliaKida94
    @NataliaKida94 Pƙed rokem +212

    Mad respect! Drzwi cudowne, no i ta przestrzeƄ... Warto byƂo zachować drzwi, a wymienić renovating managera 😁 I to są w ĆŒyciu wƂaƛciwe priorytety. Czekam na dalszy ciąg tej historii!

  • @asambi69
    @asambi69 Pƙed rokem +7

    Love all the original details and quirks. The Basement space is an awesome little addition. Glad your getting close to the fun part.

  • @lydiac2221
    @lydiac2221 Pƙed rokem +9

    Such a gorgeous flat, please keep us posted, I could watch this for hours, I'm starting to look at houses myself, no chance in London whatsoever but elsewhere especially up north around Lancaster is kind of in my budget, I keep seeing old stone houses that are completley derelict and I'm so tempted :D cant wait to see what you do with the place!

  • @edith7851
    @edith7851 Pƙed rokem +127

    Ah as a building conservator i had a tough time looking for apartments in sweden. So many renovate shit this out of their places instead of caring for their original features. Just buy a new place or an already renovated place if you don't want the features and details that make the building special. Why make it bland and generic?
    Window renovation is my favourite thing. But it's hard today to find good wood, idk the word for it in english. But once again, it's an issue with people don't knowing the importance in continuous upkeep in Windows, ut doesn't have to take a lot of time and effort. Windows before the 1970s are of good quality wood and can last for hundreds of years as long as you give it just a little bit of care. People don't have to change it to modern windows.
    Loving this apartment for you!

    • @strangerthings100
      @strangerthings100 Pƙed rokem +5

      Yes same here in Columbus, Ohio! In English we call that "old growth wood".

    • @edwardhisse2687
      @edwardhisse2687 Pƙed rokem +3

      Arent wood windows also bloody terrible at keeping heat i side

    • @edith7851
      @edith7851 Pƙed rokem +6

      @@edwardhisse2687 yeah often old wood windows "breath" a lot more. If its good or not depends on what climate you live in. Here traditionally we put in "inner windows" during winter to help with isolation. But it's become popular to instead change to modern well isolated windows. This can be bad for old building though because you change the buildings climate. Buildings need to breath or else you can start having problems with mould etc. But there are of course ways to install better ventilation etc in other ways.

    • @RandomGuy-bx2wv
      @RandomGuy-bx2wv Pƙed rokem +2

      Maybe you mean hardwood? Hardwood is stronger and heavier than softwood, and takes longer to grow.

    • @hannahbradshaw2186
      @hannahbradshaw2186 Pƙed rokem +1

      I totally agree!

  • @annh.8290
    @annh.8290 Pƙed rokem +66

    Congratulations! Yeah, old houses, every show we ever saw with people renovating an old house, they were so 'excited' to find beautiful hard wood floors under funky what ever, not us, we found rotten particle board saturated in cat urine. I can't wait to see your final reveal!

    • @mynamename5172
      @mynamename5172 Pƙed rokem +7

      We just renovated one from 1905 (in the US) and yes! We feel your pain! Not a pristine beautiful hidden-under-a-carpet floor, waiting for its big reveal. Just cat pee on "meh grade" pine, oak, or worse. It is like an archaeological investigation in bad building techniques of the last century. But still, it has a great flow and style and more interesting details than the current beige box hyper insulated gee, wonder why I have mold marvels they are building these days.

  • @milliehaagen7526
    @milliehaagen7526 Pƙed rokem +2

    I'm so happy for you 😊 LOVED the basement haul. And those doors are GORGEOUS. Looking forward to future "renovating my flat" videos!

  • @Waldemarvonanhalt
    @Waldemarvonanhalt Pƙed rokem +1

    Bathtubs in the kitchen is something you see in older New York apartments as well. People would put planks over the bath during daytime to have more kitchen space, afterwards they would use the bath. I think it's because the buildings didn't necessarily have geysers for each apartment.

  • @cbpd89
    @cbpd89 Pƙed rokem +50

    I love seeing how different people to do renovations, especially when they're trying to preserve the historic character of the house. My house is completely not historic, but it's nice to live vicariously through CZcams 😆
    We bought our house in part because there were unfinished rooms that we could decide how and what to do with them. We're turning a storage room into a toy and gaming room for the kids as our next project.

  • @Jazzcat-nj8uy
    @Jazzcat-nj8uy Pƙed rokem +14

    General rule of any renovation is that "it's always takes twice as long and costs twice as much" as you estimate!

  • @changingmind3248
    @changingmind3248 Pƙed rokem +11

    I love watching this, I'm excited to see it transform and if a friend of mine were doing this I wouldn't mind getting my hands dirty to help renovate - but damn this would be my personal nightmare to own...
    I just get so stressed out and overwhelmed if my own living space has corners which are hard to keep clean...
    I need light, easy to move furniture, enough space to comfortably move in any room and cleanable surfaces if I don't want to be miserable.

  • @Nails_By_Kimberlee
    @Nails_By_Kimberlee Pƙed rokem +2

    Love those old keys! I've seen some really cool art projects done with old keys like these. Could be an awesome addition to your new flat when you get it renovated. Really hope you got a good price on this place! Can't wait to see it finished and decorated!

  • @bluelagoon1980
    @bluelagoon1980 Pƙed rokem +22

    I love the quirks of old places like this, but they do tend to invite dilemmas. I'd have been sad to get rid of that pantry, too, even though under my ownership it would be full of expired cans and unmarked soup sachets.

  • @LalawKratke
    @LalawKratke Pƙed rokem +49

    Congratulations! I looove watching home renovations, they are so satisfying, especially those involving old buildings. Good luck with the IKEA kitchen, hope fits!
    PS I will be awaiting the "next episode of renovating your flat" 😅

  • @nightsunray
    @nightsunray Pƙed rokem +2

    I'm so happy for you and so exited to see the final of the renovation! I studied in Poland in ƁódĆș and rented a room in a renovated flat really similar to this, same decade of building. It still had some of the original doors, exactly same as your pantry door, and a built in pantry too! I really liked to imagine how it looked like before they remade it into soulless white students dorm-like thingy.

  • @berlinorama
    @berlinorama Pƙed rokem +39

    How exciting! That place has so much potential. I lived in 2 old apartments here in Berlin with no bathroom at all, though one did have a toilet in the former pantry, which was an improvement over my previous flat with a toilet off the stairwell and a 5-liter boiler in the kitchen for washing dishes and myself;-)) Love your door solutions. My friend took the original door from her former pantry and made it her bathroom door as well, since the bathroom had a crappy 1980s door on it. Excellent choice. How wild that the basement phone still works. I can't wait to see the future episodes.

  • @jelsner5077
    @jelsner5077 Pƙed rokem +33

    I have a 1908 cottage and one of the first things I did was reverse the swing of some of the interior doors. It's an easy fix and I'm surprised your first handyman refused to do it. Looking forward to seeing how you decorate. No doubt it will be charming.

  • @tarabound
    @tarabound Pƙed rokem +5

    Your new home is BEAUTIFUL. You are so lucky that you had time to do the repairs before you moved in.
    we bought ours with no floors, or toilets, interior walls, ceiling.....but we were broke and had no option but to move into it and build it around us. (work really stopped after we installed the electricity and air conditioning--too comfy)
    oh, and i love all that cool stuff you found in the basement. those keys are neat

  • @WBCRO
    @WBCRO Pƙed rokem +6

    Congratulations on owning your own place! I love that it’s in your preferred area of your city and that it’s a pre-WWII property
.a vintage flat for a vintage gal. The ceilings look quite high which must make the rooms feel larger. Those old keys are wonderful! Do you have plans for the basement space? I thought I saw plumbing for a washing machine but I could be wrong. We’re all cheering you on in this big project! 💜 from 🇹🇩!

  • @thatvintagehousewife1308
    @thatvintagehousewife1308 Pƙed rokem +30

    We bought a 1930s cottage 7 years ago, and it took 18 months to get it up to a point where we could move in (by which point I was 8 months pregnant with my second baby!). Everything needed doing. It is such a journey fixing up these older homes, but honestly so worth it! Well done for taking on the project, it can be so rewarding

  • @VJSV327
    @VJSV327 Pƙed rokem +14

    Omg đŸ˜± Congrats, you finally found a place of your own aesthetic!

  • @Lili-xq9sn
    @Lili-xq9sn Pƙed rokem +8

    Congratulations on your new home!
    A few humble suggestions: (since its really hard to understand the layout from a video. )
    If you can't save the wood floors, linoleum would be great for the period of the apartment.
    Maybe keep the small kitchen entrance and use a portiĂšre as a door. Or make it into a narrow pantry.
    I can't wait to see the next episode! Good luck! Embrace the quirks! That's what makes it unique.

  • @elaineroberson3703
    @elaineroberson3703 Pƙed rokem +5

    I love that you're keeping the integrity of the home while still renovating it to make it work for you! Also, I just started renting a house and I did the exact same thing of spending hours in the empty rooms, excited for what I would do with it.

  • @clownfromclowntown
    @clownfromclowntown Pƙed rokem +19

    I am SO excited to watch your renovation progress!!! I’m sure it’ll become more beautiful with every update. I love seeing people renovate with historical preservation in mind rather than trying to “modernize” everything.

  • @jasonfischer9857
    @jasonfischer9857 Pƙed rokem +23

    I love this! I bought a year 1940 duplex in March and I've been renovating it as well. Its been interesting peeling back the layers of previous renovations from 90s, to 70s, to 50s, and then the original. Can't wait to see what else you do with your place!

  • @wibbley_wobbly3580
    @wibbley_wobbly3580 Pƙed rokem

    Yayy! All the home renovation videos please! Excited to see the library room 😍

  • @valerie_529
    @valerie_529 Pƙed rokem

    Please do more videos about the process, this is so interesting! So excited to see the implementation of all decisions and tricks! 😍

  • @medicwebber3037
    @medicwebber3037 Pƙed rokem +20

    OH. MY. GOD, Karolina!! lol Listen, I SEE the remarkable potential in that flat. It truly does have a kind of character that tells you how great it can be...once it's all done. But, my goodness you have a lot of work to do!! (And have been doing, since you've obviously been at this for months.) I'm _CERTAIN_ it's been frustrating, and expensive, but I have the strong feeling that when this place is done, you will actually LOVE IT!! Good luck to you and your future there! (And know that compared to that place, my house isn't so bad, so I feel _MUCH_ better about the renovations I have to do, lol. Thank you for that!)

  • @chloe-fy4wc
    @chloe-fy4wc Pƙed rokem +16

    I’m so invested.
    I know how hard it is to arrange the renovation, but the result’s definitely worth it!

  • @watchingmywasteline
    @watchingmywasteline Pƙed rokem

    So excited to see what you do with this flat! I'm also visiting Poland for the first time in September and I am so excited to explore this beautiful country!

  • @cynloh2302
    @cynloh2302 Pƙed rokem +2

    Oh my goodness, I am SO EXCITED to see it all finished! Happy you were able to keep the folding doors

  • @Aster_Risk
    @Aster_Risk Pƙed rokem +11

    I love this. I lucked out and was able to buy a house in 2020. It makes my heart happy whenever someone buys a house to live in and take care of instead of just buying it to rent out and be a scummy landlord.

  • @StrayKisswHobyStrayKids
    @StrayKisswHobyStrayKids Pƙed rokem +32

    thought I read the title wrong for a sec 😂
    congrats Karolina, you really earned and deserve it !!

  • @FlagCutie
    @FlagCutie Pƙed rokem

    I absolutely adore people with a "vision" like you.
    One of my besties is just like you and has renovated 2 homes in the last decade. The first she had a very colorful Tuscan style kitchen that I may have raised an eyebrow at when she first described, but when completed was one of my favorite places to cook and snack in. Can't wait to see all that you do!

  • @Christian-is-thriving
    @Christian-is-thriving Pƙed rokem

    It's so cute! I love fixer upper places especially when they are old! You are going to have so much fun making that place your own!

  • @themurrrr
    @themurrrr Pƙed rokem +33

    It looks like a lot of work, but you can clearly see the gem it can become!
    Congratulations on your new (well, new to us) home ♄

  • @mayalynn
    @mayalynn Pƙed rokem +14

    Incredible you've been still working on videos in addition to all of this. Managing a project like this is way more work than you guess. All the best wishes for your new home!

  • @adajanetta1
    @adajanetta1 Pƙed rokem +37

    I'd love to see a drawing of the layout. I'm having a hard time imagining the flow of rooms. Also, I've never heard of an apartment with its own basement.

    • @ArisuTheFirst
      @ArisuTheFirst Pƙed rokem +46

      So regarding the basement situation, what you usually have is a big basement separated into smaller "rooms", one allocated for each flat

    • @pricklypear7516
      @pricklypear7516 Pƙed rokem +8

      I'd like to have seen a floor plan too. As a woman experienced in construction generally and renovation of older homes specifically, I can assert that virtually NOTHING is impossible. There are things that are prohibitively expensive and things that (male) contractors either can't conceive of or don't want to do.

    • @nelliebly6616
      @nelliebly6616 Pƙed rokem +10

      @@pricklypear7516 yep!
      My
      male
      constructor, didn't understand,why I wanted more table space,at the left side of the zink...instead of on the right...like most people,I am Right-handed,and when washing the dishes,it's most practical,with tablespace on the
      Left...
      He ,almost, didn't know what "Dishwashing by Hand" was....
      I live alone,and don't want to use electricity on -, for me ,
      Unnecessary
      machines ...
      I do ,though, have a washing machine 😉

    • @blinski1
      @blinski1 Pƙed rokem +9

      In Poland (and I believe it's generally a central European pattern) every apartment had to have its own storage cell in the basement. When it was big enough, you could turn it into your own workspace/hobby area. But for like 15-20 years in new buildings it is often that you have rather parking garage in the place of regular basement cells area and you have your much smaller storage cells in the separate space on the floor you live in with an access from the corridor, or no such storage at all.

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 Pƙed rokem +3

      This is actually pretty common. The apartment building would have a basement for the central heating system, maintenance, & utilities. It makes sense to also subdivide the space & allocate each apartment their own room for storage...

  • @sarahrudkin5031
    @sarahrudkin5031 Pƙed rokem

    Oh I'm so excited for you! And I cannot wait to see what you do and create in this space. Loving the home tour and basement haul content! Love from Wyoming, USA.

  • @daleannharsh8295
    @daleannharsh8295 Pƙed rokem +6

    I lived in a building built in 1926 for about a decade.... I still miss that apartment even though there was no place to park, no water pressure to speak of and the downstairs neighbors were a pain. The moment I opened the upstairs door and saw the windows and the built-in bookcases I was sold. It had a murphy bed in the front room with a dressing area, built-in cupboards in the hall...a footed tub. Ah.... The kitchen was about as big as a postage stamp. Given half a chance I would have bought that place! Enjoy the process. I hope we can shout 'Welcome Home!' soon.

  • @TheFebgw
    @TheFebgw Pƙed rokem +17

    It's so cool that you're sharing with us the progress and the story of your new home! Can't wait to see how it improves from now on!

  • @karoline123hej
    @karoline123hej Pƙed rokem

    OMG I love it!! All the quirks and history! And the telephone in the basement! Amazing! It's like an adventure where you get to discover so many cool hidden stories and things from another time! I look forward to see the next video!!!

  • @aldryrththerainbowdragon9081

    Congratulations! I'm very happy for you. I've watched your content for several years now and it was amazing watching your channel grow. I hope you find a perfect home in your new apartment.
    PS.: Girl, the folding doors would do it for me as well😍

  • @AntaresSelket
    @AntaresSelket Pƙed rokem +18

    I can't wait to see the renovations and the finished product. The flat has so much potential. I can understand why you chose it. I hope all goes well. I'll be anxiously waiting to see videos about the new flat. By the way, I'm jealous of your basement haul. I collect similar vintage objects too.

  • @cynthiaenglish2736
    @cynthiaenglish2736 Pƙed rokem +12

    I love how you are trying to preserve many key, historic features, and loved the video. I can’t wait until the next installment to see your problem solving and progress!

  • @michaelwade3175
    @michaelwade3175 Pƙed rokem +1

    I can relate to wanting an old place that wasn't too renovated with finishes that didn't fit what I wanted! My partner and I bought our 1885 Victorian home (Canada), with the whole house being very 1980s with floral wallpaper, and pink carpet.
    I love that you found ways to re-use old doors and love the flipping of the folding doors! One business that I have frequently used in our renovations, is using architectural salvage places. They often have pieces of old houses that I've been able to incorporate into ours so it feels like they were always there and are period appropriate.

  • @ah5721
    @ah5721 Pƙed rokem

    congratulations on your new place ! I know how hard it its to space plan as an interior designer-especially with those weird angles . ! I hope to see the reno process documented as I just love seeing them- especially for those who love vintage and older aesthetics 😉

  • @yvonnerobin4815
    @yvonnerobin4815 Pƙed rokem +8

    Old apartments are such a joy! My sister recently bought one from the 50s and they had to rip essentially everything out and start anew. Doors are important, pretty folding glass doors can really make the room! If there's a way to keep original features, I think it's always worth it. Can't wait to see what else you do with the apartment!

  • @christinastroup438
    @christinastroup438 Pƙed rokem +16

    When I got my house it didn't have a bathroom either and was considered a 2 bedroom even though it had 3 since the heating and cooling didn't reach the added on room. But it made it so much cheaper but like you said we got to make the bathroom look the way we wanted it to within reason lol. But I wouldn't have changed it for the world because making it look the way we wanted was much better

  • @ThePeacefulArtist
    @ThePeacefulArtist Pƙed rokem

    So wonderful and happy for you and how Rachel has done a lot of renovations on her recently new old home too! Those keys are so interesting too. The lock looks to be in heart shaped? Congratulations to you and cent wait to see more progress. 😊 - Quinn

  • @fenard
    @fenard Pƙed rokem +1

    12:40 chimney walls can be removed, but they are condition : first if it's yours chimney than do as you please you can destroy it ,second: if it's of one of apartments downstairs then you need their agreement but not very likely that they accept to destroy it because it means they can't use their chimney, thirdly :if it's from the basement and nobody uses it you can still ask the condominium about it. (ps not an expert so you still need to ask someone)

  • @georgeoldsterd8994
    @georgeoldsterd8994 Pƙed rokem +31

    When I bought my flat, my mom was like "Oh, but it's so small! It needs another room.", so her idea was to take the kitchen out onto the balcony (which was in the kitchen), and make a sort of a dinning room where the kitchen was originally. The renovation was done, but then the people from the gas company came to see the renovation and it turned out we couldn't move the oven like we wanted to, because the oven is supposed to remain in place, as per building plan (plus the gas pipe was there; also, it would have blocked access to the window, and that window is the only one that has the drying rack), and we couldn't move the gas counter (much) either. So now I have my kitchen out on the balcony, but the oven and fridge are still in the "room" (no space for the fridge on the balcony; wanted to get a small dishwasher and no space for that either). To make matters worse, the humidity in that room\ kitchen is awful, so my food spoils way too fast (good thing I have a fridge!), and I keep getting mold in some places. Thanks for the bright idea, mom. Now I'm thinking of looking for a new flat, but it's so stressful, and money doesn't grow on trees (we've spent almost as much money renovating as we did buying the damn place), and with the war in Ukraine, I'm not sure what tomorrow even brings. 😔

    • @lilyh5647
      @lilyh5647 Pƙed rokem +1

      oof that sucks. Is there any way to insulate your balcony space (I am assuming you just extended the flat out onto it).

    • @georgeoldsterd8994
      @georgeoldsterd8994 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@lilyh5647 I'm not sure, actually. We've done the warmth insulation (don't know what it's called in English, when you attach special styrofoam panels on the exterior of the wall and cover them up with some finishing mix), but it doesn't seem to help against humidity.

    • @michellebyrom6551
      @michellebyrom6551 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@georgeoldsterd8994 humidity needs ventilation to let the damp out. Just opening the window a bit, especially when you're cooking will help. Sodium Bicarbonate in hung about in cotton sachets will also absorb some damp. It takes time though and will need the bicarb changed monthly, though its very cheap.

    • @georgeoldsterd8994
      @georgeoldsterd8994 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@michellebyrom6551 thanks. I actually keep the window ajar most of the time because of it.

  • @InThisEssayIWill...
    @InThisEssayIWill... Pƙed rokem +4

    Congratulations!! So excited to see everything you do with the space! 💚

  • @CiarnaK
    @CiarnaK Pƙed rokem

    Congratulations on your flat! I expect nothing less from your channel, but I appreciate you talking through the quirks and characteristics of an old building. It's nice to see someone get the hardcore renovation/restoration passion project. My childhood home was a Victorian home from 1900 converted into a duplex in the 60s that we renovated back into a single-family dwelling. Learned a lot, discovered a lot of history (like newspapers from WWII and original silk wallpaper), but it also meant living in a construction zone from 12-18. Best of luck with your project, and may the hammer and tape measure always be near at hand!

  • @hannahdavy5812
    @hannahdavy5812 Pƙed rokem

    Can't wait to see how you get on. I really hope you take your time and really get the home you really want. Good luck with it all and don't get too stressed!

  • @TalesOfTheForest
    @TalesOfTheForest Pƙed rokem +12

    Oh I really love to see when these kind of old and...not so neat flats or houses get renovated and made all new. So nice! I'm looking forward to the result.
    And your dad wears a nice hat :)
    How about the sewing machine - did you keep it? How does it look and work?
    Pantries are indeed awesome! I had one in my first flat as a student. And I missed it in all my further living places :D

  • @saraafonso1141
    @saraafonso1141 Pƙed rokem +6

    Congratulations đŸ„ł So excited about this!! Give us updates and design plans please!!

  • @greyfells2829
    @greyfells2829 Pƙed rokem +1

    I just moved back to my family's village home to repair and renovate it, and I'm having very similar problems with the heating pipes. They're often in front of windows and ruined many of my original plans.
    Be glad you're not dealing with soaked walls though! Since my house was built on the dime before proper water barriers and insulation were in style, the walls suck in moisture and ruin any wallpaper that's put up.

  • @strangerthings100
    @strangerthings100 Pƙed rokem +4

    My favorite part: the first contractor tells Karolina the folding doors cannot be opened the other way, and she knows that is not true, so she just hires a different contractor to get it done.

  • @marc_8o0
    @marc_8o0 Pƙed rokem +3

    The Sims effectđŸ„° thinking you can do whatever u want with your home and getting a cold slap of reality

    • @tareag993
      @tareag993 Pƙed rokem

      damn you act like a boomer

  • @theoddbody1856
    @theoddbody1856 Pƙed rokem +6

    This is amazing!! Can’t wait for more updates.
    Also, do you think any of those keys match the lock you found?

  • @pprinc3ss
    @pprinc3ss Pƙed rokem +1

    I love that any flat or house that is ancient in Poland is going to have the most surreal and beautiful historic stories behind it. I’m from Aus but my dad was born in Poland and my great grandmothers house is so old but God the stories I have and why the house is built the way it is, is so fun to share with people. Anyways I miss Poland a lot. So much I get emotional thinking about it. I hope to go back to visit family soon :)

  • @montyr2083
    @montyr2083 Pƙed rokem +11

    My late uncle was a woodworker as a hobby, and after he passed I helped clean out his basement, which was also his work-space. This flat's basement made me very nostalgic, and a little teary. It's beautiful how things like craft work can create familiar spaces in completely different regions of the world.
    Congrats on the apartment!