A woman who bought a ruined building for just over €1 and has since transformed it into her dream home.
Maxine Sharples made a decision to take part in her local council's initiative called Homes for a Pound which was created to encourage people to bring empty properties back to life.
Back in 2015, she was a post-graduate pupil, studying at Liverpool’s John Moores University when she landed the pad.
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Even though she didn’t invest a huge amount of money in the project, she admitted it did take a long time to make it liveable and the 35-year-old yoga teacher was homeless - living out of a camper van as she worked on the home.
However, it was all worth it and Maxine now has a stunning home to live in.
Maxine told Liverpool Echo: "I applied in 2015 as a postgraduate student at LJMU. I lived locally in L7 at the time and heard about the scheme through the grapevine.
"Although initially, I didn't have the funds, I applied anyway and thought, 'I'll cross that bridge' if I was shortlisted.
"In 2019, four years later, I got a phone call to ask if I was still interested in a home for a pound."
Maxine was given the keys to her house on Webster Road in February 2020 and was told at the time that she had one year to complete the renovations.
Meeting her first hurdle, just weeks later the whole country would be placed into a Covid-19 lockdown.
Due to the pandemic, she was handed an extra year's extension and she got to work, building her dream home.
Maxine explained: "It has taken me 27 arduous months to get it signed off.
"It was gruelling, I couldn't have been more naïve about the process.
"As a yoga teacher, I couldn't have been less experienced in construction project management.
"With tradespeople in short supply, I took to a lot of labouring myself. I began the rip-out by myself.
"It took me nine months to get the house back to brick with a rotary hammer and borrowed electricity from my neighbours.
"A hole in the roof meant a tree had taken root, water ingress, asbestos, rat infestations, you name it, it had it all."
She added: "The house, a two-bedroom Victorian terrace, was dark and dank. It needed light for my plants and my soul.
"So I had an architect draw up my idea to flip the house upside down.
"By removing the loft and all upstairs internal walls I created this double height open space. Add in two of Velux's biggest skylights and I had transformed the house in one fell swoop of the sledgehammer.
"Well, maybe more than once, about five skips worth.
"I had £60,000 to renovate the house, I've spent £56,000 and there's still about £10,000 worth of work to get it to the standard I'd like."
After years of hard work, Maxine is delighted to be moving into her dream house at last.
She said: "I've essentially been homeless for two years, as I moved into my campervan to save money.
"Having underfloor heating is going to be such a luxury, triple glazed windows and a place to hang my plants once and for all.
"I've moved so many times in my life, from Liverpool at the age of six and back at the age of 18, I feel I can finally settle in a house that I brought back to life. It's going to be pukka...
"I am a champion of the scheme, it is an innovative idea and a massive success.
"Because ordinary people have put their blood sweat and life savings into transforming these houses, woe betides anyone in the community not pulling their weight, we are a strong community and I'm looking forward to joining it immensely and seeing how I can give back.
"My neighbours are local heroes, they were there when it was a ghost street, pioneers in the project.
"I'm the last one to complete and I've taken the longest so felt bad for ages, I'm happy to be joining them when I move in."
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