The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

The house that John built... in France

Dad completes four year project to create a holiday home from scratch

- By Joel Lamy joel.lamy@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @PTJoelLamy

As the dream of buying a holiday home in France for his family kept hitting stumbling blocks, John Davis decided to take matters into his own hands... by building it himself.

Four years and one new hip later, the two floor timberfram­e house in northern France is now ready for the 72-year-old’s five children and numerous grandchild­ren to enjoy for decades to come.

Living on his own in a caravan with just a radio for entertainm­ent, former selfemploy­ed builder and teacher John put to good use the skills he had learned as an apprentice joiner at the then Peterborou­gh Technical College back in the early 1960s.

Guided by the influentia­l Ben Iredale, John of Mayfield Road in Park ward served a five year apprentice­ship which decades later helped make his family’s dream a reality.

John was also fortunate to have been employed by Tony Howarth in a small building firm called S.A. Hughes, where he was guided by foreman Cyril Grout.

He said: “It was the best thing that happened to me, other than getting married, and gave me the skills needed to go into the world of work in constructi­on.”

The ex-serviceman lives with his wife Marie, who managed the project, which cost nearly £29,000 from start to finish.

John recalled: “After retiring the wife and I decided to get a place in France. We looked at many properties to renovate, covering 1,000 miles in one week, but they all needed demolishin­g and starting from scratch.

“The next idea was to selfbuild.”

John and Marie were able to acquire the land before submitting a planning applicatio­n through a French-speaking Englishman.

John then travelled to the village of Prétot-Sainte-Suzanne in north-west France every summer for four years, working on the house with just a radio for company.

That meant many hours listening to Smooth Radio, Radio 2, Radio 4 and Radio Jersey while doing his best to overcome the language barrier.

“My knowledge of French is pretty basic - I know holiday French. To communicat­e I did it graphicall­y with a sketch or a demonstrat­ion,” he said.

“I found the French people very helpful. My neighbours were absolutely wonderful.”

John was also very grateful to his family who visited to help with the building and decorating.

He added: “Building the house was hard work and meant living alone in a caravan and doing my own cooking and washing, but it was equally hard for my wife living back home in the UK.

“It all stems from good training and I hope that all school leavers interested in constructi­on will read this article and remember what Nelson Mandela said: ‘Everything seems impossible until it’s done’.”

‘I found the French people very helpful’

John Davis

 ??  ?? John’s wife and project manager Marie Davis helping out at the house
John’s wife and project manager Marie Davis helping out at the house
 ??  ?? Work on the house at an early stage
Work on the house at an early stage
 ??  ?? From top: The house under constructi­on; the house when completed
From top: The house under constructi­on; the house when completed
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