Man lives alone on 'ghost town' estate where all flats will soon be knocked down - but refuses to move
11.08.2022 - 16:31
/ manchestereveningnews.co.uk
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 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.
He said he is worried he