Home renovation experts Keith Bynum and Evan Thomas fulfill their dream of restoring Motor City's iconic American neighborhoods one house at a time in the new series.Home renovation experts Keith Bynum and Evan Thomas fulfill their dream of restoring Motor City's iconic American neighborhoods one house at a time in the new series.Home renovation experts Keith Bynum and Evan Thomas fulfill their dream of restoring Motor City's iconic American neighborhoods one house at a time in the new series.
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
Browse episodes
Featured reviews
Fantastic! Everyone wins here, the neighbors, the block, the new homeowners, and the city of Detroit. I love the designs, and I'm inspired to look for bargains, paint furniture, and redesign my spaces. Keith and Evan have such a positive vibe, we all know it's not easy working together as a couple. Can't wait to see more shows!
I love Bargain Block and Good Bones more than any other flip / design show because they are doing what they do out of love. It's about bringing abandoned and run down homes new life and injecting beauty back into neighborhoods. Keith and Evan are making affordable fully designed and furnished homes for first time buyers and adding so many fun and artsy (think graffiti...glam...animal print) touches to each and every one. No two are alike! The uniqueness isn't for everyone, but it doesn't have to be. It just has to be for "one." I can't wait for season 2!
What a refreshingly positive show in a time where the world feels full of negativity. I love so many things about Evan & Keith- the biggest being their uplifting positive approach to life! They make hard work and sacrifice not only NOT feel like a hardship but actually look appealing, LOL! Their artistry is absolutely fascinating & mind blowing! And best of all, they list their houses at price points that will actually bring low income buyers in & give them beautiful places to call home!!
I hope these 2 do nothing but succeed!!
I hope these 2 do nothing but succeed!!
Love the intent here - renovate abandoned houses near each other and sell for affordable prices creating momentum for the neighborhood becoming a lovely place to live. These two guys are enjoyable to watch and working on more than one house at a time keeps the show's energy high. They seem to know what they are doing and are creative with a very small budget. And selling the furnishings (also renovated from thrift shop finds) is brilliant. Will the painted tiles chip? Sure. Do they need help with window coverings? Yep. But if you want to buy the best house you could for less than $100K, this show is your inspiration. And that makes for an excellent HGTV program.
Finally, a fixer-upper show with some sense and smarts!
Keith & Evan buy derelict houses in Detroit for next-to-nothing ($1,000 for some), do ALL the work themselves, while living in the houses, then sell them to people for very little profit (doesn't look like the market could stand any higher prices), so that "normal" people/first-time home buyers can get their foot in the door for home-ownership. Some of the designs are a little "out there" (I cringed when I heard "gold cabinets", but I ended up liking them!), but the point is to get houses fixed up, improve the neighborhood, and get people into their own homes.
I also LOVE that they sell the homes furnished...and they hit the thrift stores, Habitat For Humanity's ReStore, etc., and walk out with furniture that they re-upholster, paint, etc. And it goes with the house. And these houses could almost hold their own against other shows that "stage" for several thousand dollars. They re-use as much as they can, which leads me to a major gripe I have...
I think it's terrible that almost all these home remodel shows throw so many things into the dumpster, and off to the land-fill. Some put things on the curb, and people take them off to put in their shop, garage, etc., which is great. Some re-sell on the internet, also great. But there is so much needless waste...Season 1 of "Rock The Block" was absolutely APPALLING!!! My little town of 2,000 on the Oregon Coast has a ReStore, you can't tell me huge cities don't!!!
A really good show!
Keith & Evan buy derelict houses in Detroit for next-to-nothing ($1,000 for some), do ALL the work themselves, while living in the houses, then sell them to people for very little profit (doesn't look like the market could stand any higher prices), so that "normal" people/first-time home buyers can get their foot in the door for home-ownership. Some of the designs are a little "out there" (I cringed when I heard "gold cabinets", but I ended up liking them!), but the point is to get houses fixed up, improve the neighborhood, and get people into their own homes.
I also LOVE that they sell the homes furnished...and they hit the thrift stores, Habitat For Humanity's ReStore, etc., and walk out with furniture that they re-upholster, paint, etc. And it goes with the house. And these houses could almost hold their own against other shows that "stage" for several thousand dollars. They re-use as much as they can, which leads me to a major gripe I have...
I think it's terrible that almost all these home remodel shows throw so many things into the dumpster, and off to the land-fill. Some put things on the curb, and people take them off to put in their shop, garage, etc., which is great. Some re-sell on the internet, also great. But there is so much needless waste...Season 1 of "Rock The Block" was absolutely APPALLING!!! My little town of 2,000 on the Oregon Coast has a ReStore, you can't tell me huge cities don't!!!
A really good show!
Did you know
- ConnectionsSpin-off Bargain Block: New Orleans (2024)
- How many seasons does Bargain Block have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime44 minutes
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content