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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Phoebe Jobling

Man lives alone on 'ghost town' estate where all flats will soon be knocked down - but refuses to move

A man who lives alone on an abandoned estate is refusing to move homes - despite all eight blocks of flats around him soon to be knocked down. Nick Wisniewski, 66, is the last man standing on 'Britain's loneliest street' after around 200 residents moved out in December.

All 128 flats on the council estate in Scotland are now due for demolition as the council plans to redevelop the area. But retired bank worker Nick wants to stay put in Stanhope Place in North Lanarkshire - even after the council's attempts to buy him out.

Nick claims council officials offered him £35,000 plus two years' rent to move somewhere else, but after living in his flat since 2017, he worries he doesn't know where he will end up next.

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Nick says the area used to be buzzing with 200 people, but it is now abandoned and overgrown with empty properties boarded up.

The former TSB employee claims North Lanarkshire Council's offer would not be enough to buy somewhere else, and he says he is too old to get a mortgage.

Nick inside his flat on Stanhope Place (Katielee Arrowsmith SWNS)

Nick said: “The last person left in December, it’s like a ghost town now. It’s so quiet and strange being the only person living here.

“I’m used to it now, but it can get lonely, there is no one to speak to.

“There are eight blocks each with 16 flats in them - there used to roughly be 200 people here and you would struggle to get a parking space.

“Now I am the only one left.”

Nick bought his flat in 2017 under the Right to Buy scheme which helped council tenants buy their homes at a discounted price.

Council chiefs offered Nick alternative accommodation in a terraced house for two years rent free which he turned down.

The derelict estate was once buzzing with 200 people (Katielee Arrowsmith SWNS)

He said he is worried he doesn’t know where he will end up living – but doesn’t want to leave his home.

Nick, who retired last year, said: “When people left they just dumped old cookers, mattresses, washing machine outside, it was a mess.

“The council just left the flats lying empty after people moved out.

There is no security and people could get into the empty flats and lots of windows have been broken. Thankfully I haven’t had any trouble.

“The grass is badly overgrown, it’s ridiculous. I think the council are leaving it unkept to annoy me or in the hope I get fed up and leave.

“They offered me £35,000 for my flat and two years' rent free somewhere else. But I am not prepared to start paying rent again and £35,000 is not enough to buy somewhere new. You’re talking £80,000 to £100,000 to get somewhere new."

Nick worries where he will end up (Katielee Arrowsmith SWNS)

Nick added: “I’m worried that I don’t know where I am going to end up living.

“I didn’t work all my life to have my home taken from me when I am too old to get a mortgage on something else.

“It would be so hard to leave my home."

A spokesperson for North Lanarkshire Council said: “We fully understand this is a sensitive issue and are working closely with the resident.

"It would not be appropriate to discuss the specific financial details, but we are working in accordance with our policies to ensure the resident receives a fair deal and to support him so that he finds suitable alternative accommodation.”

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