Help keep your house warm with Rockdoor
Finally the chilly autumn weather is here and because the wind picks up and the temperature starts to drop, many property owners will be thinking about ways to keep their home warmer.
Many people discover that their house might get drafty but aren’t always sure exactly where it really is coming from. Replacing outdated front doors with brand new ones could remove drafts in your house and as well help you to reduce your heating costs at this time when all of the energy companies are all putting their prices up.
Double glazed glass windows are a fantastic way of keeping your home warm however will not work in the best possible way in case your doors are old and worn. It’s not just your own front doors which might be creating drafts in your house, old back doors as well as conservatory doors could also be losing heat from your house. New UPVC French doors from Rockdoor will help keep the cold out, but may still let the light in so your home keeps the maximum heat possible.
If you’re security conscious, Rockdoor make many of the safest doors in the marketplace. Unlike traditional French doors that may be forced open and removed from their tracks with tools in the wrong hands, Rockdoor’s French doors have got features like reinforced multi-point locks so that you can sleep peacefully knowing your house and family is properly protected. The doors also have an revolutionary seal to keep the weather out as well as the heat in to ensure that your door is secure, attractive as well as functional.
Selma Blair welcomes new baby into the world
Gran Denies Home Removals After Authorities Threaten Demolition
A 76-year-old is refusing to hire a removals firm and get out of her home regardless of being threatened by her local council with demolition.
The grandmother has been handed a compulsory purchase order by Stoke-on-Trent City Council meaning her home of 38 years in Middleport is set for demolition and the area landscaped. They’re saying the home is structurally unsafe.
But Mrs Sey has been given 1 month to save the Ennerdale Close house from bulldozers and just how vowed she is staying put. The former pottery employee purchased the house brand new in 1973 and insists there’s nothing wrong with the land. She’s got a pacemaker and suffers continuous neck spasms.
Two of her fellow neighbours were also informed their houses were to be taken down but they hired removal companies and have already moved out.
The feisty OAP, that has six grandchildren, refuses to move irrespective of her age and argues that the house can stand another 30 plus years. She says the property is packed with good feelings and that if the council want her out, they’d need to carry her as she won’t move on her own agreement.
The council statement found that the homes were constructed on a marl hole and presented Mrs Sey £83,000 for the home two years ago. A marl hole is ground underneath a house that is unpredictable but a surveyor reports that the property moved about an inch that is normal for houses.
Her son Robert states that moving house would be too much for his mother and that she would suffer. They are fighting the CPO but should they fail, start a new life abroad and hire shipping companies to move overseas.