Needless to say she's loving how long this is all taking, after initially imagining a couple of weeks of wallpaper removal and painting during her time off, before being all set up in there by the new year.
Not being a fan of doing things twice (and inline with the general plans for the house) I instead decided to risk her wrath and made the decision to rewire, replace the flooring entirely with engineered timber complete with UFH, and sort out the window reveals ready for a new window in a year or so...
In typical mid century fashion, a load of smashed bricks and cement were lodged between the bricks and inner concrete blocks so first job was getting all of that out.


Now in terms of re-insulating and making good here I'm thinking of stuffing any cavity wall insulation gaps with thermafleece (as I've got quite a few rolls left over from a floor years ago), and then cutting some (foil-removed) celotex to glue into the gap with expanding foam, with a bit of PB on top, giving a small recess to fill with plaster, blending in with what's existing.
Does this make sense, or is there something else I should be considering here?
Making the window reveal smaller by chopping back to block, insulating the whole width and then re-plastering seems a lot of work, and unnecessary as the internal blocks shouldn't be cold. There won't be any internal wall insulation happening generally.