Best Builds: George Clarke looks back at four of the most dramatic tower conversions from the show, including a Georgian windmill and a railway water tower. (S4 Ep3/3) [AD,S]
Best Builds: George Clarke looks back at four incredible industrial conversions, including barns, mills, an ice house and a Victorian pumping station. (S4 Ep2/3)
Best Builds: George Clarke looks back at four incredible industrial conversions, including barns, mills, an ice house and a Victorian pumping station. (S4 Ep2/3) [AD,S]
Best Builds: George chooses his favourite church conversions, including an old fisherman's church in Devon and an arts retreat in the Outer Hebrides. (S4 Ep1/3) [S]
George Clarke catches up on a tricky, cash-strapped restoration of a derelict wartime airfield control tower in Scotland. Can a concrete military structure be converted into a family home? [AD,S]
George Clarke returns to Harrogate to catch up with Carol and Majid's brick water tower conversion. Has the heritage property been happily combined with 21st-century design? [AD,S]
Jude McKelvey wants to restore a dilapidated but listed 17th-century barn to its former glory, while also creating a family home to share with her two boys. (Ep4) [AD,S]
Matt and his future father-in-law Mike pool their resources to convert a huge water filtration plant into two semi-detached houses, sharing an internal garden atrium. (Ep3) [AD,S]
A Cheshire couple battle to turn an 85 foot art deco water tower into a six-storey house they'll never want to leave. But what kind of furniture will they fill it with? (Ep2) [AD,S]
In Harrogate, restoration novices Mark and Laura hatch a plan to turn two beautiful church buildings into family homes. But will their high standards prove too costly? (S4 Ep4/5) [AD,S]
Bruce Woodall started restoring a Georgian gazebo tower on top of Pembroke's medieval city walls 30 years ago. But recent planning laws threaten to shut down the build for good. (S4 Ep3/5) [AD,S]
George Clarke visits Lee Head at his railway station project in Northumberland. Will the conversion turn out to be the opportunity of a lifetime? (S4 Ep1/5) [AD,S]
George Clarke makes a second return to an epic, meticulous restoration project eight years in the making, involving a converted picturesque riverside water mill in Northumberland. [AD,S]
Best Builds: George Clarke looks back at four of the most dramatic tower conversions from the show, including a Georgian windmill and a railway water tower. (S4 Ep3/3) [S]
Best Builds: George Clarke looks back at four incredible industrial conversions, including barns, mills, an ice house and a Victorian pumping station. (S4 Ep2/3)
Best Builds: George chooses his favourite church conversions, including an old fisherman's church in Devon and an arts retreat in the Outer Hebrides. (S4 Ep1/3)
George Clarke visits and helps out at more architectural rescues and redevelopments cross Britain. This time it's an Edwardian Baptist church in the Pennines. (S4 Ep1/5) [AD,S]
George Clarke catches up on a tricky, cash-strapped restoration of a derelict wartime airfield control tower in Scotland. Can a concrete military structure be converted into a family home? [AD,S]
In Harrogate, restoration novices Mark and Laura hatch a plan to turn two beautiful church buildings into family homes. But will their high standards prove too costly? (S4 Ep4/5) [AD,S]
A Cheshire couple battle to turn an 85 foot art deco water tower into a six-storey house they'll never want to leave. But what kind of furniture will they fill it with? (Ep2) [AD,S]
George Clarke returns to Harrogate to catch up with Carol and Majid's brick water tower conversion. Has the heritage property been happily combined with 21st-century design? [AD,S]
George Clarke visits Lee Head at his railway station project in Northumberland. Will the conversion turn out to be the opportunity of a lifetime? (S4 Ep1/5) [AD,S]
George Clarke makes a second return to an epic, meticulous restoration project eight years in the making, involving a converted picturesque riverside water mill in Northumberland. [AD,S]
George Clarke catches up on a tricky, cash-strapped restoration of a derelict wartime airfield control tower in Scotland. Can a concrete military structure be converted into a family home? [AD,S]
George Clarke visits and helps out at more architectural rescues and redevelopments cross Britain. This time it's an Edwardian Baptist church in the Pennines. (S4 Ep1/5) [AD,S]
In Herefordshire, Marco and Kath take on a tough project restoring a pair of listed period cow barns that are tumbling down, in a restoration that is beset with problems from the start. [S]
George Clarke catches up with Neil and Jackie at their old fisherman's church in Brixham, Devon, and discovers how the restoration project changed their lives beyond recognition. [AD,S]
Jude McKelvey wants to restore a dilapidated but listed 17th-century barn to its former glory, while also creating a family home to share with her two boys. (Ep4) [AD,S]
Matt and his future father-in-law Mike pool their resources to convert a huge water filtration plant into two semi-detached houses, sharing an internal garden atrium. (Ep3) [AD,S]
A Cheshire couple battle to turn an 85 foot art deco water tower into a six-storey house they'll never want to leave. But what kind of furniture will they fill it with? (Ep2) [AD,S]
George Clarke catches up with Ian and Jayne, who bought a derelict Victorian school in the valleys of west Wales, and faced many battles to bring it up to date. (Ep6/6) [S]
George Clarke catches up with Nik and Vanessa visiting their immaculate 19th-century gatehouse cottage which was so tiny they couldn't fit a proper bathroom inside. (Ep5/6) [S]
George Clarke returns to Thrum Mill to meet Dave and Margaret Heldey, who have battled flooding and serious illness to restore one of Northumberland's most stunning watermills. [S]
George Clarke revisits Keith and Sheena McIntyre to see if their struggles to restore a stunning but isolated church in the Outer Hebrides have paid off. [S]
George Clarke catches up with a retired policeman who took on the challenging restoration of a railway water tower at Settle station on the edge of the Yorkshire Dales. [S]
George Clarke returns for a new series, visiting a Berkshire couple whose conversion of a 1930s pumping station into a modern four-bed home tests them to the limit. (Ep1) [S]
Yorkshire couple Carol and Majid embark on an ambitious adventure, transforming a brick water tower into a five-storey home. But unexpected costs and legal problems hit the project. [S]
Justin and Charlotte have a dramatic vision for transforming a derelict World War II airfield tower in the Scottish Highlands. But just fixing the windows absorbs nearly half the budget. [AD,S,SL]
George Clarke meets Jim and Bee Goody, who have taken a financial gamble with their project to turn a derelict Tudor revival school in Essex into their dream country home. [S]
George Clarke helps people turn historic buildings into stunning homes. In Shropshire, a couple endeavour to restore a derelict 18th-century farmhouse. (S3 Ep1/6) [S]
George meets Jamie Brown, who has big ideas for turning a colossal RAF bunker from World War II into a home. But the Nottinghamshire bunker is buried in earth and has no natural light. [S]
Recession-hit builders Ian and Jayne face a massive battle converting a huge, derelict Victorian school in the Welsh hills of Pencader into both a place of business and a home. [S]
Restoration experts Alan Appleby and his wife Dora have saved a flint mill in Stone, Staffordshire, which was about to fall down. George Clarke helps uncover the building's unique history. [S]
In this edition, George Clarke offers assistance to Alison and Matthew Grey, whose redevelopment of a Victorian pumping station in Hertfordshire is threatened by spiralling costs. [S]