Tips for renovating while you live in your home, plus how to keep your sanity

Renovation

Ask anyone who’s renovated and they’ll no doubt tell you it can turn certain parts of your life upside down — particularly if you happen to be doing it while also living in your house.

From living out of boxes to surviving without functioning kitchens or bathrooms, these are the nuggets of wisdom from a few couples on what saved their sanity during the process.

Sponge baths and takeaway food

Roísín and Zac Tarrant are no strangers to renovations, having done up two houses and building a following online by documenting their DIY adventures on Instagram.

They first had a crack at renovating their Brisbane home and more recently worked on a cottage in Toowoomba.

Roisin and Zac Tarrant outside their brick house in the sun.  Roisin is pregnant and rests her hand on her bump

Roísín and Zac Tarrant recently renovated their cottage in Toowoomba.(Supplied)

Zac said one of the difficult parts of their Toowoomba renovation was “making provisions” during their bathroom makeover.

“I think the tricky one is when you have one bathroom, and you’re renovating a bathroom, and you then have no bathroom while it’s being gutted,” he said.

“We had an outhouse that had a toilet and we would live here (inside) and we would have the toilet out in the outhouse and we would sponge bath ourselves.”

“That sounds so gross — it was only for, like, two nights I swear,” Roísín clarified.

“We literally used our newborn’s portable bath, it’d be like ‘OK, now it’s my turn to get in the baby bath’.”

The pair added that if you’re facing more than a couple of nights without a bathroom, hiring a portable ensuite might be a good option, or shacking up with family if you can.

Bathrooms are one hurdle, the other is kitchens.

Lucas MacLean and his wife Mackenzie are in the middle of their latest renovation, including dealing with a non-operational kitchen.

“I think it’s easier to not have a bathroom than to not have a kitchen, or we’ve struggled with not having a kitchen,” Lucas said.

“Cooking, everything’s 10 times harder, so it’s like, I’ll just have cereal because that’s easy.”

When it comes to other food, takeaway was another popular option, so too was using camping equipment if you’re interested in a ‘home-cooked’ meal.

Fridges in the lounge room

Though not entirely practical, one piece of common advice was to embrace the disorder and remember it won’t be forever.

“I think the key is you’ve got to be prepared to live in chaos,” Mackenzie said.

“Be prepared to know that in the morning, it’s going to take five or 10 minutes to make a coffee because you’ve got to unplug this cord, move this thing, just to find your coffee cup.

“Our fridge is in the lounge room, our pantry is in the walk-in robe and our kitchen sink is in the ensuite, so it takes a while to get around the house and find things.”

Three people renovating a house with a fridge sitting in the middle of the room

Renovating often means odd spots for refrigerators and other appliances.(ABC News: Georgia Hitch)

She also recommended not unpacking anything prematurely.

“Once we do a room, then we can unpack things in that room, but right now we’re living bare minimum and we’re just trying to keep things dust-free with the plastic shaving everywhere,” she said.