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- Chase Morrill, his sister Ashley, Ashley's husband Ryan Eldridge, team members Matthew Dix, Jared Baker, Brad Weston, and Lance Gatcomb, and other team members, breathe new life into their clients' cabins across the Great State of Maine.
- Adventurers and their teams battle Mother Nature to build unique homes in remote areas. From Montana to the North Pole, from yurts to log cabins to Earthships, will they build in time to beat their deadlines?
- This charming group of West Virginia craftsmen honor their ancestors as they reclaim and restore some of America's oldest and most beautiful barns and cabins.
- Tom Silva, Richard Trethewey, Roger Cook and host Kevin O'Connor, the experts of Ask This Old House, travel the country making house calls in order to answer homeowner questions and everyday home improvement projects.
- Cascading 15-foot waterfalls; luxury grottos and swim up bars are nothing for the Pool Kings. Follow along as they create over the top award-winning dream pools for their clients. From your own custom lake to a show-stopping backyard water park, the sky is the limit when the Pool Kings are on the job.
- Robert Van Winkle, better known as rapper Vanilla Ice, demonstrates his expertise in real estate and home renovation by renovating a house along with a team of handymen.
- For home restoration expert Tamara Day, there's no such thing as a home that's too big. This Kansas City native and mother of four specializes in restoring the neglected large homes that others are too scared to take on. She brings these big beauties back to life so that new families can move in and love them again.
- In the DIY Network series Building Alaska, viewers follow a cast of characters who set out to construct incredible cabins in rugged and remote areas in the Alaskan wilderness.
- Home renovation looks so easy on TV. We see a project move quickly and smoothly from start to finish - and the results are always beautiful. But somewhere between "before" and "after" there are always at least a few speed bumps - and one great story. Budgets skyrocket, tempers flare, relationships suffer. This is real life, and DIY Network's Renovation Realities proves that even in home improvement, truth is often stranger than fiction.
- Candis and Andy Meredith transform a 20, 000-square-foot historic school into their family home -- all while juggling projects for clients, rental properties and life with their blended family of nine.
- Prospective flippers document the trials and hardships of their very first housing renovation projects. Littered with text comments from professional flippers, these newbies do their best to come out on top and turn a profit.
- Music icon Daryl Hall uncovers his love of restoration by restoring his 18th century mansion to its original condition.
- Marine contractor Jason Varney and his team are taking docks to the next level, creating custom deck spaces for clients who love their lakeside living. From traditional boathouses to sundecks and tricked-out living rooms with all the amenities, if you can dream it, Jason can build it.
- Jon and Etta Smith build a self-sustaining bison ranch in a remote corner of northwestern Montana.
- No job is too big, or too high, for tree house dreamer, B'fer Roth, and his band of "tree musketeers". We follow the Treehouse Guys as they hammer out luxurious and unique retreats in the trees for families across the country.
- Clint Harp and his carpentry team at Harp Design Co. take on crazy requests and tight deadlines.
- Our cameras are there to capture the twists and turns that come with home improvement. In the end, Marc shows homeowners that with a little work and ingenuity, getting their dream kitchen is never impossible.
- Organization specialist Kraig Bantle and the crew from Garage Brothers, a family business based in Raleigh, N.C., offer to clean up garages, basements and attics that are out of control. Kraig and his team clear the clutter and repurpose the spaces into rooms that homeowners can enjoy. The catch? The crew takes any valuables they find and resells them, hoping to turn a profit.
- Features lakefront creations built and designed by the Herman family based out of central Illinois.
- This ain't your Grandma's knitting show! Knitty Gritty, a new how-to series for the DIY Network, presents fun and fabulous ideas for creative knitters, from beginners to advanced. The series debuts this July on DIY and is hosted by Vickie Howell - a young, hip crafter with a passion for knitting. In each episode, knitting experts will join Vickie as she takes viewers through projects such as baby "Ugg" boots, a groovy guitar strap, and even a bag knit from recycled plastic grocery bags. Since knitting is such a popular social activity, "knitsters" also join Vickie in the episodes and tackle the featured project. More than just informational, this fun and creative series will appeal to knitters across the board.
- Boyz II Men singer Nathan Morris renovates a dilapidated country club estate into a multi-million dollar dream home.
- Landscape contractors Sara Bendrick and Chris Lambton are stepping in to tackle the curb appeal of tough-to-sell homes. They give lawns a facelift and bring order to exteriors to raise the value of homes and get them sold.
- What's worse than stepping outside into a yard you hate? On DIY Network's I Hate My Yard, host Sara Bendrick whips unruly outdoor spaces into shape-no matter how bad-with economical, yet clever, landscape designs. The show features an array of new products and useful take-away information for any homeowner looking to turn their yard into an outdoor oasis. With a little help from Sara, yard-hating homeowners will see what it takes to get the outdoor space they've always dreamed of.
- A couple and their crew build custom, eco-friendly yurts on Oahu¿s beautiful North Shore. They teach their clients how to live off the land and make the world a better place without sacrificing even the smallest comfort.
- In the mid-western U.S. state of Minnesota, most residents own a cabin - some of them, on the water or buried deep in the woods. While some cabins are dilapidating after years of neglect, others were poorly built to begin with. With so many cabins needing restoration work, it can be a massive opportunity for builders. And in Prior Lake, Minnesota, brothers Chase and Brock Jurgensen are those opportunistic builders. Chase usually leads the projects, and big brother Brock finds creative uses for reclaimed wood in each of those builds. Together the brothers are a 'dream team' that can transform any old lodge into a new, functional and beautiful home in the wilderness.
- House flippers purchase run down, almost condemned frame houses that have been set for demolition to make way for larger homes. They move the houses to an auction lot where they renovate the houses and sell via auction. Unlike most flipping shows, profits are usually under $10,000 (often WAY under). There is a competition element as the flippers will compete against each other as to which team profits the most. The only prize is bragging rights. Teams are the Snow Sisters, The Lone Wolf, the Young Guns, and Casey & Catrina.
- Ana and Jacob White and their two small kids are a modern-day Swiss Family Robinson, building an off-the-grid cabin on the Alaska Range. With all of their materials needing to be transported by snowmobile, this adventurous couple will have their work cut out for them as they create an entire home with no utilities available. And with the unpredictable Alaskan weather, not to mention aggressive wildlife, this family will be racing against the seasonal clock to get the cabin done before the dead of winter.
- The Home Wranglers work to build a one bedroom home for a client's parents. A colorful barn wood collage wall, a re-purposed oil pump, and troubles while transporting the home cause stress and worry along the way. Will the homeowners end up loving the final result?
- Mr. T shows up at deteriorating homes armed with a sledgehammer and a team of design experts. Together, they will demolish and then build an amazing space for the awestruck homeowners in just three days.
- Limp Bizkit's Wes Borland and his fiance, Queen Kwong's Carre Callaway, fell in love with a massive Detroit fixer-upper after seeing pictures online. Now they¿re ready to get their hands dirty and restore this historic gem!
- Craftsman Tim McClellan and his team of skilled experts renovate and restore houses in American boomtowns.
- "Rev. Run" from RUN DMC keeps it in the family as his 9,000 sq. ft. home in New Jersey undergoes a complete renovation. Follow Rev. Run, his wife and children, as they remodel their 4-bedroom, 5-bathroom home.
- Barnwood Builders' Mark Bowe is heading to the heartland to work side by side with some of the best craftsman in America. From old world blacksmiths to roofers, joiners and glaziers, he'll get the ultimate education working as an apprentice to the best of the best. And when you're rehabbing buildings nearly two centuries old, the tools of the trade are unlike anything you've ever seen.
- Bill and Elizabeth Shatner are remodeling their outdated California home.
- Expert hosts from DIY Network series help rebuild a 1920s lakeside house that will become a luxurious home for a lucky sweepstakes winner. The renovations were designed in part by users on diynetwork.com.
- A new magazine-style series on DIY Network, in which co-hosts Amy Matthews and This Old House's Kevin O'Connor bring viewers inside homes across the U.S. that feature innovative building materials, techniques and gadgets. The best part: Kevin and Amy demonstrate how homeowners can make their homes smarter with the touch of their do-it-yourself buttons.
- Master craftsmen from Vanilla Ice Goes Amish are fish out of water when they travel across the country to work on home improvement projects. From the big city of Chicago to the bright lights of Las Vegas and the beaches of Southern California, it's a brave new world tackling modern tasks like managing social media and driving a car. Find out what happens to them when they leave Amish country and take their talents on the road.
- Wasted Spaces shows people how to make the most of unused spaces in their homes.
- In residential real estate it's the kitchen that really makes or breaks a home. This hip new series turns bland and outdated kitchens from eye sores to eye candy. Acquire new ideas on how to get the kitchen of your dreams without breaking the bank. Learn out-of-the-box ways to re-use what you've got and get answers from the professionals, using tomorrows newest products mixed with today's innovative design. So don't hate your kitchen...learn how to give it some love!
- DIY cruises the hottest trend in cars--customizing and personalizing the ride. You'll learn the latest in car modification options, specialized equipment and installation techniques to "trick out" your car. In this fast-paced series, DIY experts explain and demonstrate options for both style and performance, including suspension and wheel modification, squeezing more power from the engine, getting the interior up to speed, body kits and paint options and, finally, personalized vinyl graphics and accessory lighting. Live life in the fast lane with Tricked Out on DIY!
- Three hip young female hosts show homeowners how to completely transform their homes using nothing but fabric (and a touch of paint when necessary). DIY's "seam team" is made up of an interior designer Cat Wei, upholsterer Kelly Keener and seamstress April Eden. Instead of emptying each room and starting from scratch, the Material Girls work with the elements that are already in the room. Using only fabric, scissors, staples, needles, thread and help from the homeowners, they will turn the room into a redecorated masterpiece.
- As other networks build and improve on homes, DIY Network actually has the guts to totally destroy its very own house just to repair it. Disaster House suffers very real damage like dropping a half-ton piano from almost 10 stories high, sponsoring the first sanctioned roller derby inside the living room, and having Page, an 8,000-pound African Elephant, help clog the toilet. These outrageous experiments accelerate the typical wear and tear a house incurs and mimic common catastrophes so viewers can discover what it takes to repair some of the biggest mishaps homeowners face today.