This Old House

Premieres: October 8

Network: PBS

Who Is In It? Norm Abram, Roger Cook, Kevin O'Connor, Tom Silva, Richard Trethewey

Where We Left Off: Kevin O’Connor, Norm Abram and the “TOH” crew were in Weston, Mass., about 20 miles west of Boston, building a new timberframe home using prefabricated and green technologies.

What to Expect: Two new projects, both in the Boston area, mark the show’s 30th anniversary season. The first, in the suburb of Newton Centre, updates a 1915 Dutch Colonial, making it more suitable for a family of four on a limited budget. In the second, the crew takes to the rough urban neighborhood of Roxbury to renovate a vacant, foreclosed 1870s-era Second Empire house, dividing it into two units for two low-income families to take ownership of.

What happened in 2009?

Where We Left Off: Kevin O’Connor, Norm Abram and the “TOH” crew were in Weston, Mass., about 20 miles west of Boston, building a new timberframe home using prefabricated and green technologies.

What to Expect: Two new projects, both in the Boston area, mark the show’s 30th anniversary season. The first, in the suburb of Newton Centre, updates a 1915 Dutch Colonial, making it more suitable for a family of four on a limited budget. In the second, the crew takes to the rough urban neighborhood of Roxbury to renovate a vacant, foreclosed 1870s-era Second Empire house, dividing it into two units for two low-income families to take ownership of.

    What happened in 2010?

    Where We Left Off: Kevin O’Connor, Norm Abram and the “TOH” crew were in Weston, Mass., about 20 miles west of Boston, building a new timberframe home using prefabricated and green technologies.

    What to Expect: Two new projects, both in the Boston area, mark the show’s 30th anniversary season. The first, in the suburb of Newton Centre, updates a 1915 Dutch Colonial, making it more suitable for a family of four on a limited budget. In the second, the crew takes to the rough urban neighborhood of Roxbury to renovate a vacant, foreclosed 1870s-era Second Empire house, dividing it into two units for two low-income families to take ownership of.

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