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Woman who bought one of Italy’s ‘one euro houses’ on the truth behind the scheme

Simon Calder’s Travel

A woman has turned an abandoned Italian “one euro” house into a £384k dream home – with a spa, outdoor kitchen and wine cellar.

Meredith Tabbone, 45, decided to bid on a one euro house on a “whim” after her friend sent her an article on the scheme.

Several small Italian towns have hit the headlines for selling off vacant houses for €1 a pop in the past couple of years.

Meredith Tabbone, 43, heard councils in rural Sicily were auctioning off abandoned houses with a one euro starting bid in a bid to regenerate the village
Meredith Tabbone, 43, heard councils in rural Sicily were auctioning off abandoned houses with a one euro starting bid in a bid to regenerate the village (Meredith Tabbone / SWNS)

The municipalities are offering homes for the symbolic price of €1. They say having these homes improved and occupied in the next few years is worth more to the towns than selling them off at full price.

Meredith threw in a random offer of £4,400 – for a 1600s disused building in Sambuca di Sicilia in Sicily, Italy.

The building had no electricity or running water, and the roof was thick with asbestos.

Meredith bought the home next door for £27,000 and knocked through to create a four bedroom, five bathroom property.

She spent £384k and five years creating her dream vacation house fit with an outdoor kitchen, spa and an outdoor party room.

Meredith’s 'one euro’ house before it was renovated.
Meredith’s ‘one euro’ house before it was renovated. (Meredith Tabbone / SWNS)

Meredith, a financial adviser, from Chicago, Illinois, US, said: “The house was in very bad condition – but in many ways, it was everything I expected it to be and more.

“It had so much charm.

“It had such interesting architectural detail – you could really see the history coming through the walls. But it was a fixer-upper, to say the least.

“It was worth it. It turned out well.

“It’s modern but in keeping. It’s a vacation home.”

The outside area of Meredith's ‘one euro’ house after it was renovated
The outside area of Meredith’s ‘one euro’ house after it was renovated (Meredith Tabbone / SWNS)

Meredith began researching how to get an Italian citizenship in 2016 and discovered her dad Michael’s great-grandfather, Fillippo Tabbone, came from Sambuca di Sicilia – a small village in Sicily.

After reading an article on people bidding on one euro houses in Italy, Meredith threw in a bid in January 2019 and found out she has been successful in May of that year.

She started work on it a month later – spending £661 to remove the roof in an environmentally-safe way.

In August 2020, she bought the home next door via a private sale to knock through and…

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