This 36-year-old bought an abandoned house for just $1 and fully renovated it—look inside her ‘dream home’

In February 2020, I officially got the keys to my new home: a two-bedroom, 796-square-foot Victorian house that I bought for £1.

The sale was part of the “homes for a pound” program created to revive the Webster Triangle, a small run-down area in Liverpool. But there was a catch: the house was in complete disrepair. To qualify, I had to be a first-time homeowner and be able to fix it up within a 12-month period.

The council estimated that the renovations would cost $61,400.

When I applied for the program in 2015, I was a 28-year-old graduate student without much in the way of savings. I didn’t have all the funds I needed, but I submitted my application anyway.

By the time I was off the waiting list, my financial situation had changed. I inherited a property from my dad, who had recently passed away, and sold it to get the funds for the renovations.

Today, my house has been remodeled to maximize light and has made headlines in the U.K. for its novel use of space.

Turning my home upside-down

I knew I had my work cut out for me. The house had been abandoned for 15 years. The windows were boarded up, there was a leaky roof, a rat infestation, asbestos, and no power or heating system.

But I loved it. It was my pile of crumbling bricks.

I realized that I could flip the house’s original layout to get more natural light. So I moved the bedrooms to the first floor, and the kitchen and living room to the second floor. Then I added skylights to the roof.

I paid an architect $1,064 to draw up the blueprints. The contractors I talked to laughed at my proposed reconfiguration of the house. The cheapest quote I got was still $37,600 over my budget, which was the entirety of my savings. But I was undeterred. 

In May 2020, at the height of the pandemic, I quit my job as a project officer at a university and started to do the renovations on my own, with limited tools.

Due to the lockdown restrictions, I was granted a…

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