DIY SOS


DIY SOS is a British DIY television series made for the BBC and presented by Nick Knowles, Lowri Turner, Kate McIntyre and Brigid Calderhead. The series was originally broadcast from 1999 to 2010, before transitioning into its current Big Build format, also presented by Knowles. Collectively, 205 episodes of SOS and The Big Build have been broadcast, while Garden SOS aired for one series in 2003.

''DIY SOS'' (1999–2010)

Launched in 1999, after audience figures showed interest in other home make-over shows such as Changing Rooms, DIY SOS was a weekly full builder and designer level renovation of a section of a viewer's home, taken on by a team of professionals after a viewer's DIY project had gone wrong and not been finished. It is the longest running show of its format having been shown for over 17 years, and has an active dedicated forum.
Launched with presenter Nick Knowles, the format consisted of a main project, and a small project initially headed by Lowri Turner, and a viewer call-in vote format voting for one of three families who have made short video pitches for their projects to be addressed in the following programme.
An episode filmed in June 2009 was not broadcast after a domestic incident where a man held his wife hostage at gunpoint before shooting himself, the week before the intended broadcast. The episode is believed to have included the fitting of a new kitchen into the couple's semi-detached home.

Personnel

Presenters

SeriesEpisodesStart DateEnd Date
167 October 199918 November 1999
287 March 200025 April 2000
3818 October 200013 December 2000
4812 June 200131 July 2001
5831 January 200221 March 2002
6820 June 200229 August 2002
789 January 20036 March 2003
8810 July 200328 August 2003
9815 January 200410 March 2004
10519 May 200419 August 2004
11816 March 200511 May 2005
12828 July 200526 September 2005
13101 May 200617 July 2006
1488 November 20062 March 2007
151013 July 200719 November 2007
16627 June 200815 August 2008
17822 August 200810 October 2008
1869 April 200914 May 2009
19828 April 201016 June 2010

''The Big Build'' (2010–)

In 2010, DIY SOS was rebranded, adopting the title The Big Build. In doing so, the show became a one-hour programme in which the team enlists the help of local tradesmen, suppliers and the larger community to help deserving families. As the title suggests, the projects often involve "ambitious" construction work such as building a loft conversion or extension. In October 2015, The Big Build "Veterans Village" special achieved a 34% audience share, the biggest in the series' history.

Personnel

Presenter

During The Big Build, the following designers appear in an alternating recurring capacity.
SeriesEpisodesStart DateEnd Date
20215 April 20101 July 2010
21426 August 201026 January 2011
22613 April 201116 August 2011
231010 January 201215 October 2013
24622 October 201330 May 2014
25612 May 201421 October 2014
26918 December 201417 December 2015
271017 February 201629 March 2017
2868 June 201715 November 2017
2954 January 201817 January 2019
30723 May 20192019

Reception

Following the transition to the Big Build format, according to Stuart Heritage of The Guardian, the show is now a "big hitter", explaining that "Pound for pound offers far more emotional heft than almost anything else on television". In its previous format the show had, in his view, merely "burbled along pointlessly", lacking ambition or an emotional connection with viewers.

''Garden SOS'' (2003)

On 7 July 2003 the BBC announced a sister show to DIY SOS, to be called Garden SOS; Running for only one series, it was first broadcast on BBC One from 4 September to 21 October 2003. Using the same format as DIY SOS, it was to tackle gardens instead of houses. Described by a reviewer as a hybrid between DIY SOS and Ground Force, the show featured a red and blue team of experts sent to work on different projects, to be completed within three days. It was presented by television presenter Andy Collins and garden designer Ann-Marie Powell. As with DIY SOS, viewers were given the chance via a telephone vote to select the projects in each subsequent episode. Reviewing the first episode for the Radio Times, David Butcher described the series as "all good fun", but lacking in gardening related content, and suggested this was one garden makeover series too many in an increasingly saturated market. There were six episodes in total: