Next Episode of £10k Holiday Home is
not planed. TV Show was canceled.
The average British family spends £5,000 a year on holidays so could you buy a dream holiday home in your favourite foreign destination for just double that cost? That is the challenge that Julia Bradbury is taking on in £10k Holiday Home.Julia's inspiration comes from the ingenious owners who have bought properties overseas and in the UK for under £10k and renovated them with stunning results from exquisite stone cottages to a cave which was purchased for one Euro, to Italian mountain retreats.
In this first episode, Julia visits Portugal, where her internet searches have led her to two possible houses. Her first stop is the Algarve, but she soon finds that the further north you travel, the cheaper properties are.
In the second episode, having put an offer in on the Little Blue House in a village in Northern Portugal, Julia now has an anxious wait while she pays to have all the necessary legal checks carried out. When she returns to sign on the dotted line, she meets the cottage's previous owner as they must exchange contracts in person.
Julia Bradbury has got the keys to her cottage and starts to realise what a tough task she has to get all the work done on budget. The house has no water or electricity and needs work to the roof. She also wants to put in a new staircase and knock down some walls. But with around 3,000 pounds left to spend, the enormity of the challenge hits home. Julia calls her friend, designer and salvage expert Max McMurdo, for help. Together they decide what needs to be done to her Little Blue House.
Julia's cottage in Northern Portugal still has no water and no electricity and now, no stairs or internal walls either. If she's to stand any chance of achieving her 10,000 pound holiday home, she must get stuck into the DIY. The house was last decorated in 1964 and hasn't been lived in since the 1980s, so Julia and Max have their work cut out.
In the fifth episode, Julia is reaching the final strait of her Portuguese project but her budget takes a hit when she is informed that the Little Blue House must be rewired.Designer Max heads to Portugal to design and build a new staircase for the home but when he arrives the workmen have some bad news – the property has not been connected to the mains sewerage and they have uncovered 30 years' worth of excrement in a pit underneath the property. Max and the workmen need to deal with this smelly problem before calling in an emergency plumber to install new pipes.Julia travels to Hungary's Lake Balaton to meet Jon from Ipswich who bought a three-bed cottage with garden and adjoining fields for £5,700. As a builder, Jon was able to do all the work himself with help from his partner and they completed the renovation in just over three weeks for a total of £6,540.Back in the UK, Max has also been busy building his own mobile holiday home. The quirky retro design includes an outdoor shower made out of a watering can and a fridge made out of a terracotta pot. The home on wheels even has a woodburning stove. Max gives Julia a guided tour of his project - but has he come in on budget?
In the final programme of the series, Julia has the end in sight, but has she managed to make her dream of a 10,000-pound holiday home into a reality? In just three months, Julia and Max have transformed the house and now it's the moment of truth - has Julia come in on budget, and what will the locals think?
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