Can and Han have been destroyed, they got the house that they wanted the least.
The block is back and this year the devil will be in detail.
For the first time in 20 seasons, each house on the block is built purely for the show. And each 365 m² house has the same floor plan (which means that small details such as fittings and luminaires become important sales arguments).
Each house is located on a block of 2000 m² in the Victorian municipality of Daylesford.
Although identical inside, all five houses will have their own external exterior. The most striking is that some people have a pointed roof, while others have flat tops.
What we know so far: the Blok 2025
Big Fish: Why the big bidder of the block stopped the show
Huge losses: the block 2024 -houses sell for less than they convert costs to build
This meant that the five teams had very clear ideas about which they wanted to renovate. So, who are the teams who want to grow up when they go home after renovating their houses in 2025?
Emma and Ben, from the Mornington -Schierteiland of Melbourne, are sweethearts in high school. Ben is a civil engineer. Emma is a teacher of woodwork and textile that also moonlight as a pole dancing instructor.
“It’s the best job in the world,” she laughs.
Emma and Ben from Victoria.
The only tools that have been South Australians Mat and Robby are the scissors. Mat is a hairdresser and Robby is a hairdresser. Robby is a new father of baby Son Brooks, while Matt is a former art champion. The duo has been the best friends for 15 years.
Alicia and Sonny come from Queensland and have three children. He is a plumber. She works in a dental clinic.
After a tearful farewell to their children – and they do not promise to embarrass on national TV – the couple arrived in Daylesford to quickly clock that they were “the old couple on the spot”.
West -Australian pair Han and can not only have names that are the same, they also look alike. They met on a dating app and turned it off in the early hours about their shared love for dogs and wine.
A geologist who once worked in the mines, Han is no stranger to debilitating hours. Can be less. She has worked in marketing and fashion and likes “balance and harmony”.
The other teams watched one look at the Lookalike blondes and assumed that they are a few sisters instead of partners.
Sonny and Alicia from Qld.
The Glamazon pair are not the only representatives from the West. Police officers and parents of two living Britt and Taz in a dusty, outback city.
That first means in a block, no NSW applicants got the figure this year.
In good news, nobody should make it rough this year in a tent.
Instead, the teams all get their own caravan to live in (including host Scott Cam) during the three -month build.
“They are the nuts of the duck,” Scotty tells them about their accommodation (which offers another useful opportunity to connect a sponsor).
Mat decides that their caravan will be an “s ** T-free zone” in which it is explained that otherwise the limited environment would become a “nicket of odor”.
However, his decree falls on deaf ears and
Robby’s intestinal movements and nocturnal clutter quickly become a regular plot point.
After touring their new excavations, Scott reveals that the first challenge will be a bit different. The five teams will draw on all their creative skills and Showmanship to create a float for the annual Chillout Festival of Daylesford, a celebration of the LGBTIQ+ community of the city.
Judges Shaynna Blaze, Marty Fox and Darren Palmer would decide whose float performance had the largest, sparkling impact to determine the order of the house.
The event had a special meaning for some teams.
An emotional can said: “We have to make the lesbians proud and make this big and great!”
“Getting the chance to be outside and pride means so much.
“For many of my teenage years I felt a lot of shame and uncertainty about my sexuality. I did not claim that I have a girlfriend or that I am gay and I still hide it for certain people and in certain cases. So, to get to national TV is a big thing.”
The challenge was just as meaningful for Mat explained: “High school was probably the most difficult time of my life because I was a figure skating, gay boy in a private Catholic school with lesbians for parents, so s ** t was not f ** king easy in the late 90s, I will say so.”
The boys were perhaps a bit too enthusiastic to make an impact with their float. And Scotty had to intervene to gently remind them that the block was a family show when she saw them turn an inflatable hammer into a large male appendix with the addition of two strategically placed disco balls.
“My mother looks at the show,” Scott warned.
Scott Cam steps in to seize Mat and Robby’s Appendix and to ensure that the block retains its family -friendly status.
The relaxed host was not worried about the choices of the farmer’s cabinet for the parade of the boys, and assured them that the block team could find somewhere else to stop the microphone package when they pulled out their pants and in budget smuggers.
The police stole the official block sign for their float and mats’s wardrobe choice, where Taz also attracted a close-fitting swimwear for the parade.
The assessment of the parade gave Darren the perfect opportunity to get the weapons out. Again. In the meantime, Shaynna was visibly delighted by the sight of Mat and Caz in their gowns.
Darren Palmer takes what is likely to be the first of many possibilities to get his weapons out, while Shaynna Mats’s Budgie -smugglers appreciate.
For Marty it was businesslike as usual with the enthusiastic broker who was already focused on an auction day.
“Unlike other seasons where we have compared apples with oranges, this season are apples with apples, with apples,” Marty explained. “So it is important that you understand in which style you are going and what the buyer is looking for on the Daylesford market.”
The Bedazzled Britt and Taz won the victory and chose home three, distinguished by its wooden facade and roof.
The other teams were amazed that Britt and Taz had chosen the building in the middle of the street instead of what all other teams agreed with it were the more appreciated locations at both ends of the comic.
Emma and Ben became second and delved into the dark and moody house. Robby and Matt took on booking with house five.
Robby and Mat come in the daily lesson pride spirit.
With all the roofs of the pitch, a destroyed Han and he can do two packs, leaving losers Alicia and Sonny with house four.
“I hate it. It is as if I let go of my child,” Han moaned about missing their dream house (house one) and discovering their property had a retaining wall that had destroyed their opinion.
Han decided to have a long cry in the bath, while he could work on Google in search of silver linings to their flat roof.
The teams now have $ 20,000 to renovate their Senate, a bathroom. With all the plumbing already in place, everyone will use the same bathroom layout, so that the teams can distinguish themselves through their finishes.
And it will be a matter of first in, first served because nobody can have the same, tiles, fittings and luminaires.
As usual, Scott urged the teams to keep some money in reserve for landscape architecture week.
And there is an extra incentive to budget well this season. Every week the team that is best in balancing their books receives a $ 10,000 bonus.
“That is a huge stimulus because, even if you don’t win or end up, you could still come with $ 10,000,” Can Can.
It is all smiling when the cast of the Block 2025 meet on the Daylesford site.
Sonny said that the new cash bonus meant that the new cash bonus meant that there was a maximum of $ 50,000 for the taking every week (if you edited in bonuses for perfect scores and room profits).
Mat and Robby saw the extra prize money as a means to finance a wine cellar. If they can scrape the money to do it, the couple believes that a basement can be the thing that distinguishes them from their neighbors.
It also meant asking a very sun smart foreman, whether they could follow the fine Aussie tradition that had started by Dale Kerrigan on the castle to dig a hole.
Comprehensible that it was a big risk, Mat: “If we spend money on a basement and win nothing, we can end up a very big hole.”
Han gives an example of how she will deal with setbacks this season.
Although they have never renovated anything before, Mat and Robby have decided to look for a contemporary country for their bathroom, with lots of dark wood finish.
Unfortunately, Alicia and Sonny had a similar brown aesthetics, which led to a friendly rivalry about fittings.
Melburnians Emma and Ben Die The Rounds of the Kitchen have done renovations for a modern atmosphere from the middle of the century, with many green tones to reflect their environment.
Britt and Taz liked a “modern and organic” look and therefore have chosen bathroom tiles in soft pink and of course colored stones.
Can was hammered by Han’s desire to micromanage all her decisions. Ultimately, after some input from Han via telephone, it can go with floor-to-ceiling tiles and with a green function.
“In an ideal world we would always shop together,” can explain it.
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