Couple buy derelict 120-year-old mansion which has no roof and windows after mix-up at auction

Couple buy 120-year-old derelict mansion for £30,000 by MISTAKE after mix-up at auction – but now plan to turn it into three apartments to pay off their mortgage

  • Couple, Cal Hunter and Claire Segeren planned to buy an apartment in Glasgow at an auction for £30,000
  • But Cal accidentally bid on a 120-year-old derelict mansion by mistake after a mix-up with lot numbers
  • They insist Cal’s gaffe was a ‘beautiful mistake’ and are now restoring the building after falling in love with it
  • The pair plan to transform it into three apartments, two of which they will sell to pay off their mortgage 

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A couple who bought a derelict 120-year-old mansion at an auction by mistake due to a mix-up with lot numbers have fallen in love with the building and are now restoring the building.

Cal Hunter and Claire Segeren planned to buy an apartment in Glasgow for £30,000 but ended up with Jameswood Villa in Dunoon, Scotland which has a leaking roof, subsidence missing floorboards and no windows.

Cal, of Hull, East Yorkshire, attended the auction alone while Claire was in Canada, and accidentally bid on the partially collapsed property which was listed before the apartment because he didn’t realise it was being sold in three lots. 

But the couple insist Cal’s gaffe was a ‘beautiful mistake’ and are now restoring the building despite experts telling them they should demolish it and start again from scratch.

 The pair plan to transform it into three apartments, two of which they will sell to pay off their mortgage –  and are getting help from their friends to complete the project.

Cal Hunter and Claire Segeren planned to buy a apartment in for £30,000 but ended up with Jameswood Villa in Dunoon, Scotland which has a leaking roof

Cal, of Hull, East Yorkshire, attended the auction alone while Claire was in Canada, and accidentally bid on the property which was listed before the apartment because he didn't realise it was being sold in three lots

Cal, of Hull, East Yorkshire, attended the auction alone while Claire was in Canada, and accidentally bid on the property which was listed before the apartment because he didn’t realise it was being sold in three lots

But the couple insist Cal's gaffe was a 'beautiful mistake' and are now restoring the building. The couple are pictured in the caravan they are staying in while they carry out the restoration

But the couple insist Cal’s gaffe was a ‘beautiful mistake’ and are now restoring the building. The couple are pictured in the caravan they are staying in while they carry out the restoration

Cal, 26, from Hull, told the Daily Record: ‘We love the house and its stunning location in a village on the edge of a Scottish loch. It’s all been a beautiful mistake. 

Claire, who is from Toronto, Canada said: ‘The house was built in 1900 and had a lovely feel to it and so much character that we felt it would be a sin to level it and start again. So we made the momentous decision to give it a go.’

She added that discovering they had bought the crumbling house instead of a two-bed apartment came as a shock – but the couple’s despair to to relief when Cal saw the property for the first time.

The cash-strapped couple plan to sell off two of the apartments to pay off debts. 

 The apartment the couple had planned to buy in Glasgow had been fire-damaged but they thought they could restore it in six months.

 While they transform the mansion they have moved into a small caravan in the garden. 

‘Neither of us are from Scotland so we had to look up Dunoon on the map and we were both relieved to see it wasn’t that far from Glasgow.

‘But our relief turned to despair when Cal pulled up outside the house and saw it for the first time.

‘It was in a state of partial collapse, it was subsiding, there were gaping holes in the roof and walls, the timbers were rotten and the land was waterlogged. Derelict was too mild a word.’ 

The couple decided to restore the building despite experts telling them to tear it down and start from scratch

The couple decided to restore the building despite experts telling them to tear it down and start from scratch

Claire had planned to study medicine at Glasgow University but decided to take a year out and refurbish a property because she couldn't afford the increased fees for international students. The couple are pictured inside of the property

Claire had planned to study medicine at Glasgow University but decided to take a year out and refurbish a property because she couldn’t afford the increased fees for international students. The couple are pictured inside of the property

Claire and Cal made the decision to make the most of a bad situation and are now restoring the tumbledown house bit by bit and blogging about it

Claire and Cal made the decision to make the most of a bad situation and are now restoring the tumbledown house bit by bit and blogging about it

Claire is working full-time on the restoration while Cal delegates his time between the house and the carpentry jobs he is doing to fund the restoration. The crumbling interior of the property is pictured

Claire is working full-time on the restoration while Cal delegates his time between the house and the carpentry jobs he is doing to fund the restoration. The crumbling interior of the property is pictured

Jameswood Villa in Dunoon, Scotland has a leaking roof and no windows. The pair are pictured outside their new home

Jameswood Villa in Dunoon, Scotland has a leaking roof and no windows. The pair are pictured outside their new home

The couple plan to transform the building into apartments. They will sell two of them to pay off debts

The couple plan to transform the building into apartments. They will sell two of them to pay off debts

Claire had planned to study medicine at Glasgow University but decided to take a year out and refurbish a property because she couldn’t afford the increased fees for international students.

She said a ‘full-blown’ property restoration wasn’t what the couple had in mind but they are determined to ‘see the project through’ after starting it. 

She explained the couple are doing as much work as they can with help from their friends but there are some jobs that are proving to be ‘too big’. 

Claire is working full-time on the restoration while Cal delegates his time between the house and the carpentry jobs he is doing to fund the restoration. 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk