Take a fresh look at your lifestyle.

Shocking pics of ‘saddest’ Grand Designs home show part of it is COLLAPSING

0

SHOCKING new photos of the mansion dubbed the “saddest ever” Grand Designs home show disastrous cracks that have condemned the property to a cut-price deal.

Chesil Cliff House near Braunton, North Devon, cost owner Edward Short his marriage and left him with debts of over £7million.

Chesil Cliff House was dubbed the 'saddest ever' Grand Designs home

9

Chesil Cliff House was dubbed the ‘saddest ever’ Grand Designs homeCredit: Knight Frank
Now cracks in the existing driveway, built in the 1960s, have contributed to a disastrous price drop

9

Now cracks in the existing driveway, built in the 1960s, have contributed to a disastrous price dropCredit: Edward Short

After failing to find a buyer, his creditors have called in receivers to put the property on the market for a cut price £5.25million.

Edward tells The Sun the price has plummeted from a one-time asking price of £10m because of a driveway, which existed before the ambitious build, which has begun to collapse.

The driveway, which dates back to the 1960s, leads to a second smaller property on the plot, dubbed The Eye.

Incredibly, tenacious Edward plans to borrow ANOTHER £2m to fix it and install the final fixtures and fittings, including a kitchen and bathrooms, in an attempt to restore its original asking price and make it more appealing to buyers.

“We tried reducing the price to sell but it had a growing problem in the old driveway,” he says. 

“We built a driveway to the new house but there was an older one, possibly built in the 1960s, that goes down to the smaller house, The Eye.

“The edge of it is collapsing so it’s no longer safe to use. That is reflected in the price drop.

“But everything’s fixable and I believe I can raise funds to build a better entrance where you can park cars and still drive left to The Eye or right to the house. It’s an opportunity to really improve it.”

Edward is keen to borrow another £2million to fix the driveway and install fixtures and fittings inside the property

9

Edward is keen to borrow another £2million to fix the driveway and install fixtures and fittings inside the propertyCredit: Edward Short
The driveway built since Edward took ownership, and everything that was built by Edward is absolutely fine, but this existing one has cracks

9

The driveway built since Edward took ownership, and everything that was built by Edward is absolutely fine, but this existing one has cracksCredit: Edward Short
Edward during the earlier stages of the build

9

Edward during the earlier stages of the buildCredit: SWNS:South West News Service

Nic Chbat, director of Match Property estate agents in North Devon, who previously assisted with finding a buyer last year, tells The Sun: “The old original driveway to the left of the entrance as you face the sea, which was probably built in the 60s, is showing signs of structural failure and a structural engineer has condemned it. 

“The driveway built since Edward took ownership, and everything that was built by Edward, is absolutely fine.”

Edward says he has already agreed the £2m with a lender and is “in a triangle of negotiation” with them and the receivers to gain back control. 

We built a driveway to the new house but there was an older one, possibly built in the 1960s, that goes down to the smaller house, The Eye. The edge of it is collapsing so it’s no longer safe to use

Edward Short

“It’s been passed on to the receivers but that means you lose control of how it’s sold, and if they sell for their listed price of £5.25m I will have lost an awful lot of money,” he says.

“I’m still trying to avoid a complete disaster for us as a family and the current situation would end up as exactly that.

“Whereas doing something about the problems, I believe, would leave me in a position to be able to pay back the most money, and that’s the bottom line.”

Edward had talks with Omaze about taking on the property for its prize draw

9

Edward had talks with Omaze about taking on the property for its prize drawCredit: Neil Hope

Edward began work on the stunning five-bedroom, glass-fronted pad in 2010, with plans to live there with then-wife Hazel and their two daughters Nicole, now 24, and Lauren, 22.

With an initial budget of £1.8m, Edward hoped to complete in 18 months, but development issues meant the build lasted 12 years and costs spiralled out of control.

In 2019 Kevin McCloud described the home on Grand Designs as the “carcass” of a seashore wreckage.

The stress and mounting debt put a strain on Edward and Hazel’s marriage and they split, but remain good friends.

Former music producer Edward – who is now engaged to new love Jalia Nambasa – previously told The Sun he felt guilty for the cost of the project on his family.

“There’s no doubt what I put Hazel through was horrendous,” he said.

“There’s a lot of guilt about that. But there was no way out, once we started. If we didn’t finish we’d have been in big trouble.”

The unfinished property went on the market but it was removed from an estate agent’s site with talk of their being a “serious buyer” – but they pulled out just before the contracts were signed.

Everything’s fixable and I believe I can raise funds to build a better entrance where you can park cars and still drive left to The Eye or right to the house. It’s an opportunity to really improve it

Edward Short

Edward reveals he even had talks with house raffle site Omaze, but the price tag was too hefty for them. 

According to Rightmove, the new asking price of £5.25m offers a potential buyer a “once in a lifetime opportunity” to take on and complete one of the UK’s “most spectacularly situated coastal homes”.

Nic Chbat, director of Match Property estate agents in North Devon, who previously assisted with finding a buyer last year, tells the Sun: “I think completing a fit out and resolving the issue of the left side driveway would be very beneficial and remove many of the obstacles to purchasing that buyers may have. 

“I would suggest that an asking price of £10M would be more than realistic and achievable, if this were the case.”

While the price tag is high, Edward points out that a house on the same stretch of coastline has recently sold for £8.5m – and he was told the new owner plans to knock it down and rebuild.

Edward with his fiancee Jalia Nambasa

9

Edward with his fiancee Jalia NambasaCredit: Neil Hope
Edward is determined not to lose more money

9

Edward is determined not to lose more moneyCredit: Neil Hope
The glass-fronted property boasts incredible sea views

9

The glass-fronted property boasts incredible sea viewsCredit: Neil Hope

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.