BBC DIY SOS: Widow 'amazed' as unfinished home is rebuilt

  • Published
DIY SOS in KetteringImage source, Grant Norman/BBC
Image caption,

Lindsey McAuley said the DIY SOS team had created a "beautiful" home

A woman whose family home was left uninhabitable when her husband died from an aggressive form of cancer said she was "happy and amazed" after it was transformed by the BBC's DIY SOS team.

Lindsey McAuley's husband Shaun died two months ago with work on the property in Kettering, Northamptonshire, left unfinished.

Volunteer builders and trades people joined forces to transform the home.

Mrs McAuley said it was "really beautiful".

The DIY SOS team took a week to renovate the house, which had been left "unliveable" without a kitchen or bathroom.

Image caption,

Lindsey and Shaun McAuley had started work on an extension to transform their Kettering home last year

Mrs McAuley, who is a midwife, married ex-Royal Engineer Shaun on 12 December 2019.

The couple had two children of their own, as well as two daughters from Mrs McAuley's previous marriage.

They had planned to have an extension built on the house in Pine Road before installing the kitchen and bathroom themselves.

Image caption,

The couple's house has been left uninhabitable following Shaun McAuley's death last year before building works could be completed

Image source, Grant Norman/BBC
Image caption,

A host of builders and trades people helped to transform the property

Work had started in May last year, but Mr McAuley fell ill in mid-September.

Initially he had an operation on his kidneys and bowel, but was then struck down by an aggressive cancer and died in November.

Mrs McAuley said: "I'm feeling really happy and amazed at what all these people have come to do.

"It's an absolutely beautiful house. Shaun would be absolutely blown away by how beautiful it is. He would have loved it.

"It's open, airy, comfortable and cosy."

Image source, Grant Norman/BBC
Image caption,

Lindsey McAuley said her family will move back into the house on Monday

Members of the Royal Engineers, Shaun's old regiment, also helped out on the project.

One of them, John, told BBC Radio Northampton: "This is definitely somewhere that has a good community.

"It's been really lovely to see the community come out and support people."

Find BBC News: East of England on Facebook, external, Instagram, external and Twitter, external. If you have a story suggestion please email eastofenglandnews@bbc.co.uk, external

Around the BBC