From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishremodelre‧mod‧el /ˌriːˈmɒdl $ -ˈmɑːdl/ verb (remodelled, remodelling British English, remodeled, remodeling American English) [intransitive, transitive] CHANGE/MAKE something DIFFERENTto change the shape, structure, or appearance of something, especially a building The airport terminals have been extensively remodelled. —remodelling noun [uncountable]→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
remodel• Three hundred years later his house was remodelled by another successful bourgeois - this time a wealthy Oxford brewer.• She remodelled it with careful fingers, then held it close to the flame.• The pressure to remodel old pubs is of course nothing new.• We're remodeling the basement this winter.• In the next two months the port will make a pitch to investors to remodel the Ferry Building.• But remodelling the local administration had little effect; real power remained in the hands of the leading citizens of Mondovi.• Old building have been remodelled, their heavy facades retained.