We bought an old grain silo for £1 and turned it into our home – people are shocked when they come inside

A COUPLE has told how they bought an old grain silo for £1 and managed to transform it into their dream home.

Bob Campbell, from Derbyshire, and his partner Carol Ann bought the structure online for just £1 and painstakingly transformed it into a cosy and economical home.

Bob Campbell bought the silo for just £1 on eBay before converting it
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Bob Campbell bought the silo for just £1 on eBay before converting itCredit: YouTube
The interior is filled with a number of items Bob lovingly crafted himself
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The interior is filled with a number of items Bob lovingly crafted himselfCredit: YouTube
The tiny home is roughly four metres high and just four metres wide
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The tiny home is roughly four metres high and just four metres wideCredit: YouTube
Bob and Carol Ann have transformed it into a cosy and economical home
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Bob and Carol Ann have transformed it into a cosy and economical homeCredit: YouTube

Bob revealed that he spotted the site while scrolling through eBay after a "few beers".

And after pouring their heart into the project, the couple have now lived in the tiny home - which cost about £4,000 to develop - for almost six years.

"I was thinking a couple weeks would be absolutely fine, I'd probably have had enough by then, but yeah, about five-and-a-half years," Bob told Living Big in a Tiny House.

Carol Ann said she was "not very keen at first" on the project, but it was "meant to be".

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"It's been a brilliant five years living in nature," she said.

The couple have also kitted out the surrounding landscape, which features artworks and a pond.

The silo was initially intended to be an artwork, but over time evolved into a "tiny house".

It stands at roughly four metres tall, and four metres in diameter.

"It's tiny," said Bob, who crafted just about everything inside the silo too, including a fireplace made out of an old gas bottle and a dining table made from a sawblade laid into concrete.

Recycled plastic was used to help insulate the structure, and parts of old palette were cut down into bricks for use on the walls.

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The kitchen features all the amenities you might expect - oven, hob, kettle, and sink, with plenty of room for spices.

The bed is located in a sleeping space "upstairs", accessed by a ladder which pulls down.

The bathroom is hidden away behind a door inspired by something which you might see on a submarine.

A circular shower and composting toilet are squeezed into the tiny space, along with a mirror and sink.

Bob and Carol Ann's story comes after a nature lover revealed why he decided to live in a van and forage for food - while only working two days a week.

And in April this year The Sun reported on a woman who lives in a van she built using just two tools - but who admitted she would rather be in a house.

And in March, a family of eight revealed how they managed to keep together in the face of homelessness, as well as saving over £10k a year by converting two double-decker buses into their home.

All the necessary amenities are squeezed into the home's bathroom
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All the necessary amenities are squeezed into the home's bathroomCredit: YouTube
The bed is located on the upper level of the home, accessed via a ladder
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The bed is located on the upper level of the home, accessed via a ladderCredit: YouTube
The kitchen features a hob, oven, sink, and many other amenities
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The kitchen features a hob, oven, sink, and many other amenitiesCredit: YouTube
The living space features a dining room table made from an old sawblade
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The living space features a dining room table made from an old sawbladeCredit: YouTube
Bob is pictured assembling the silo as part of his project
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Bob is pictured assembling the silo as part of his projectCredit: YouTube