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Almost a year later, we have finally finished rebuilding the upper west wall. There were a lot of scary walls on this house: a broken corner, a tree stump, ivy damage, you name it, we probably have it. But this wall was the scariest. I mean it. When we bought the house, we looked at the damage on the west wall, where half of the wall had literally been washed away, on the side of a slope, and were sure that it would be the thing that brought the whole house crashing down. It scared us more than any other section. Which is why we couldn’t be prouder to be releasing this video to you today: a finished rebuild. It was also our personal white whale for many months. We have made some amazing progress around the exterior of the house these past two years, but no matter what we did, this ugly corner greeted us every morning as we drove to the house. It was a glaring reminder of how far we had to go. But not anymore. We started this last August. That’s right, one year ago. It started with excavation. We had to dig out the entire hillside just to access the foundation of this wall. We dug through a literal homemade landfill, pulled out boulders, and moved cubic meter after cubic meter of soil out of the way. Just to reach the wall. Then the wall foundation itself felt like a masterclass in bricky construction. At one point, we had two types of mortar being mixed at the same time: cement mortar for the cinderblock retention wall, and lime mortar for the limestone wall behind it. It was a fairly complex puzzle, with two walls coming together at the same time. But luckily, afterwards, building the wall was relatively smooth. We were finally able to raise the backdoor frame. Standing at around 150 cm tall, this door is not fit for most humans living in 2025. It is especially not fit for THESE humans living in 2025, who both stand at around 180 cm tall. We have spent two years banging our heads on that God awful door frame, and to be able to raise it and rebuild it like it was always there was a pleasure. On the corner, we were finally able to remove the root of the problem: literally. Most of the damage to this wall was caused by ivy growing in the wall. And while excavating for the corner, we had the immense pleasure of removing it entirely. It felt like taking a rock out of your shoe. The relief we felt knowing the ivy was not coming back on our watch was indescribable. Not to mention, finally moving the beam. It's hard to explain just how scary this 20 second clip of footage was to do in real life. The clip you see in this video is uncut. It shows 4 hours sped up at 20000x speed, to see how much the beam moved. But in real time, we had to move every pulley, every jack less than a centimeter at a time. Rocks were falling everywhere, while the wood moaned. But it was so worth it to see the entire roof pop itself back into place like a dislocated shoulder. No one was more shocked than us that it worked. Now, every morning when we see our house, coming around the corner of our village road, we feel relief and pride. We are so excited to see it finished, and even more excited to make it shine. We have an extremely long list of thank you’s to give for this video. Many people on this list are not seen on camera, but we wanted to give them the credit they deserve anyway. Ladi Bajde for literally everything. Toni Kovač for countless reasons, but specifically here for helping us remove a stump not shown in the video. Ádám Hampuch and Metod Bajde for helping dig out the aforementioned stump. Krištof Štrovs and Nejc Razpotnik for helping remove the ugly cinderblock structure. Elena Priess for helping excavate the hillside. Olivia Johansen, Tobias Sonne-Hansen, Valentin DaSchitzi, Ramona Stöckle, and Luke Hanson for helping with wall construction. Mathilda Elkær and Asta Dalga for helping with drainage and infill. CHAPTERS: Introduction: 00:00 - 00:47 Western Wall Demolition: 00:48 - 01:26 Western Wall Excavation: 01:27 - 02:00 Western Wall Foundation: 02:01 - 02:46 Western Wall Construction: 02:47 - 04:47 Above the Door: 04:48 - 05:22 Above the Door Construction: 05:23 - 06:15 Corner Demolition: 06:16 - 07:17 Corner Foundation: 07:18 - 07:57 Corner Construction: 07:58 - 10:48 Moving the Beam: 10:49 - 11:24 Corner Construction Cont.: 11:25 - 11:50 Connecting Foundation: 11:51 - 12:23 Connecting the Wall: 12:24 - 13:44 Drainage: 13:45 - 14:43 Door Step Construction: 14:44 - 15:53 Finishing Touches Construction: 15:54 - 16:23 Final Reveal: 16:24 - 17:06 Credits: 17:06 - 17:24