George Clarke's Amazing Christmas Spaces (Channel 4, 8pm)

WEARSIDE-BORN architect George Clarke rounds off his small spaces series of programmes tonight with a festive special, but the Sunderland FC fan is already looking for home owners prepared to take part in a new renovation series.

Channel 4 features has commissioned Betty and Amazing Productions to make Ugly House (a working title that is quite likely to change) a radical six-part design series, hosted by George. The series will champion the power of great architecture to transform undervalued and unloved British housing stock into exciting spaces in which to live.

In each programme, innovative and awarding-winning architects will grapple with an "ugly" house and remodel it into a home that works and excites the owners. The results are intended to challenge our ideas about how we live in the 21st century.

Big transformations are possible because each project will be sticking to an average budgets of around £50,000. With the property market growing increasingly competitive, this series is following George’s previous attempts to encourage owners to love the house they already live in and come up with ideas about upscaling its look to make the home work for a family future. Top of George’s list is helping a new generation, who thought they would never be able to afford their own home, to look at projects like ex-local authority properties, which could be be transformed into dream homes.

Ugly House intends to find at least six “eyesore” homes and gives major architects the chance to give back and work on domestic projects with small budgets like they did in the early days of their careers.

“I’m delighted to be presenting Ugly House for Channel 4 and it's a really exciting first time co-production between Betty and my new TV company Amazing Productions. Phenomenal architecture and design should be available to everyone and this show will hopefully bring it to the masses, showing us how we can turn our unloved houses into beautiful homes,” says George.

Tonight, George continues to think small and looks at some equally inspirational builds, but with a Christmas theme. He's off to visit a 130-year-old tin church, one of the earliest takes on flat-pack construction in the country.

His mate Will Hardie takes a tour of another chapel, although this one has been transformed into a luxury home. The guys then return to the subject of the UK's only female ice carver creating a winter wonderland ice bar in Liverpool before looking back at their favourite builds of the series over drinks in Joel Bird's Shed of the Year-winning construction.

A Night Of Heroes – The Military Awards (ITV, 8.30pm)

PHILLIP Schofield and Amanda Holden are on hosting duties again with the former saying that it was the proudest moment of his TV career a couple of years ago when he met an elderly surviving member of Bomber Command on stage.

"If I hadn't been on the telly, I probably would have cried," he admits. "That was one of the most extraordinary and humbling things, when I was in complete awe of these guys and what they'd been through as youngsters, that he should say something like that to me seemed so ridiculous that I was genuinely moved."

Now in its seventh year, The Military Heroes Awards takes place at London's National Maritime Museum and the categories featured are Saving Lives, Brothers in Arms, The Firefight, Bomb Hunters, Hero Abroad, Home Front Hero, Support to the Armed Forces and Judges' Special Recognition Award.

The Fall (BBC2, 9pm)

IN the final episode DSI Stella Gibson finds Paul Spector’s lair, but is devastated that Rose Stagg isn't being held there. However, Gibson won't give up easily, and instructs her team to step up their interviews with Spector's wife Sally Ann and family babysitter Katie.

But it's when she finally comes face-to-face with Spector himself the outcome is far from certain.