Hay presto! Farmer unveils the 'illegal' mock-Tudor castle he tried to hide behind 40ft hay bales
By DANIEL BATESLast updated at 17:50 27 January 2008
Hiding a needle in a haystack is easy enough.
But Robert Fidler kept something much bigger concealed among the piles of straw down on his farm... a castle.
Over the course of two years, he managed to secretly ? and unlawfully ? build the imposing mock Tudor structure in one of his fields, shielded behind a 40ft stack of hay bales covered by a huge tarpaulins.
Scroll down for more...
The family hid the house behind hay bales 40ft high for four years while it was being built - in a failed bid to avoid having to apply for planning permission
An Englishman's home is his castle: The Fidlers dream home complete with ramparts and cannons
Once it was finished, he and his family moved in and lived there for four years before finally revealing the development ? complete with battlements and cannons ? in August 2006.
Mr Fidler claims that because the building has been there for four years with no objections, it is no longer illegal.
But he is under siege from council planners, who say the castle at Honeycrock Farm, Salfords, Redhill, Surrey, will have to be knocked down.
"I can't believe they want to demolish this beautiful house," said 59-year-old Mr Fidler. "To me they are no different than vandals who just want to smash it down."
Mr Fidler, a farmer, erected the disguise in 2000 out of hundreds of 8ftx4ft bales of straw and covered the top with blue tarpaulin.
Scroll down for more...
The Fidler's country kitchen is located in the turret of their 'castle'
After building the castle on the site of two grain silos at a cost of £50,000, he and his wife Linda went to extraordinary lengths to keep it secret. That included keeping their son Harry, now seven, away from playschool the day he was supposed to do a painting of his home in class.
"We couldn't have him drawing a big blue haystack ? people might asked questions," said 39-year-old Mrs Fidler.
Mr Fidler, who has five children from a previous marriage, said: "We moved into the house on Harry's first birthday, so he grew up looking at straw out of the windows.
"We thought it would be a boring view but birds nested there and feasted on the worms. We had several families of robins and even a duck made a nest and hatched 13 ducklings on top of the bales."
Scroll down for more... {12}
But neighbours were unimpressed.
One said: "Nobody thought anything of it when the hay went up. It was presumed he was building a barn or something similar.
"It was a complete shock when the hay came down and this castle was in its place. Everyone else has to abide by planning laws, so why shouldn't they?"
Problems began last April when Mr Fidler, thinking he had beaten the planning system, applied for a certificate of lawfulness which is given if a property is erected but nobody objects to it after four years.
But Reigate and Banstead Council says the four-year period after which the building would be allowed to stay is void ? because nobody had been given a chance to see it.
The matter will now be decided in February by the council's planning inspector, who could give the Fidlers as little as six months to tear the castle down.
The family are not alone in falling foul of planning laws.
Last November pensioners Eileen and Eamonn Kelly were told they would face prison unless they demolished the one-bedroom extension on their semi-detached home in Swanley, Kent after planners said it was "out of keeping" with the area.
More recently around a dozen Britons living in Spain have had their homes torn down after a clampdown on illegally built properties built on the coastline.
A spokeswoman for the Reigate council said: "Mr Fidler has built the house without planning permission, not sought retrospective planning permission and now claims it is legal because it has been up for four years.
"We don't think the four-year rule applies because it had been hidden behind bales of hay."
Share this article:
Here's what readers have had to say so far. Why not add your thoughts below?
What a monstrosity! And not just the house. Why do this couple believe that they are above the planning laws that everyone else abides by? In my area a severely disabled young man fought for years to be able to build adapted accommodation on his parent's farm, it was unfair and he won in the end but he abided by the planning process. The extreme lengths this couple went to including involving their son in this deception shows what untrustworthy individuals they are.
Good luck if he gets away with it.
Add your comment
FEMAIL TODAY
- Miami nice: Nadine Coyle soaks up the sun poolside The Girls Aloud singer, 23, looked content as she lapped up the rays with boyfriend Jason Bell
- New mother Louise Redknapp looks shattered as she arrives in LA to start work again Eight weeks after giving birth the ex-pop star was wiped out by the flight
- Strictly relaxation only for pregnant Tess Daly as she enjoys a winter break in LA The presenter, 37, is spending a week with daughter Phoebe
- Old Man About The House: 70s heart-throb Richard O'Sullivan is unrecognisable The 64-year-old looked frail outside retirement home where he lives
- Ex-EastEnder Letitia Dean flexes her muscles to prove her dieting prowess Walford's podgy ex-barmaid, 41, has a slim new physique
- Fiona Phillips becomes a school-run mum after quitting the GMTV sofa The 48-year-old clearly enjoyed her new role as she dropped off her two children
- 'I looked like a person in a fat suit': Steps star Claire Richards on how she dropped five dress sizes The 31-year-old shifted 5 stone in nine months
- Here comes the law! Sugababe Amelle Berrabah's night ruined as police arrest friend in car outside nightclub Singer was smoking when officers pounced
- 'I'm sorry, Jett': John Travolta's tearful whisper as he hugged son for last time Paramedic reveals movie star's last words to boy after failing to revive him
- Tearful Ulrika says 'I'd be delighted to be voted out' as she admits in late-night chat she's missing her four kids Her £175,000 fee isn't healing the pain
- Lily Allen drops two dress sizes after 'hypno-dieting' The singer shows off her new silhouette after shedding 20lbs in £300-a-time sessions
- Daniel Craig shows Vanessa Feltz how to walk the red carpet While he looked every inch the polished star, the TV presenter struck a different pose
- Recluse who locked herself away for 20 years because she was too fat emerges to win slimmer of the year Gill Butcher, 46, who was a Size 26, shed 11 stone
- Who says I'm barking? Meet the pets on 'Prozac' Amber's owner says anti-depressants help her cope with day-to-day stresses
- Woman drink driver who crushed 15-month-old toddler to death in his pushchair is jailed for seven years
- Cold war! Gas bills in UK to soar as Russia switches off supply to 12 European countries
- England cricket in chaos as captain Pietersen and coach 'quit'
- Revolt! Robbed of their right to buy traditional light bulbs, millions are clearing shelves of last supplies
- Loner who built network of tunnels out of rubbish in his home dies 'after getting lost in labyrinth'
- Apple makes iTunes available to all MP3 players - but increases cost of premium tracks to 99p
- The day the SEA froze: Temperature fall to -12C... and it won't warm up until Sunday
- Treading on thin ice: Reckless couple take toddler for a walk... on a frozen lake
- 'Our innocent angel': Toddler killed in arson attack hid from flames on her bed because she was too scared to jump
- 'I'm sorry': One of world's richest men leaves note to wife before killing himself over £1bn loss
- Policewomen sue the Met for £1m each in 'groping' sex case
- Revealed: The 27 M&S stores being axed after 7% sales slump
- Euston, we have a problem: 100,000 commuters stranded after power lines come down in ANOTHER rail fiasco
- Miliband and Sir Alan Sugar 'targeted' in anti-Semitic hit list on Islamic fundamentalist website
- 200 bail hostels to open secretly in residential areas - with NO public consultation
- One dead and two Good Samaritans fighting for their lives after motorway pile-up
- We'll get 'Shameless' families out of bed and off to work in the morning, says Blears
- Duke charges taxpayers £280,000 to build public footbridge over his riverbed
- Young woman lashed naked to post and burnt to death 'for being a sorcerer'
- Boy, six, drives family car to school after missing bus
- Model plane made by British POW in Great Escape war camp discovered
- Playing outside can prevent children becoming short-sighted
- Great-grandfather cancer patient dies after 'wandering out of hospital ward unchallenged'
- Single father turned away from swimming pool... because he took two sons
- Funeral firm buries wrong man then exhumes him without permission
- MORE HEADLINES
- Treading on thin ice: The couple who took toddler for walk... on a frozen lake
- Revolt! Robbed of their right to buy traditional light bulbs, millions are clearing shelves of last supplies
- Southern exposure: Man left dangling trouserless and upside down after Vail ski lift mishap
- 'I'm sorry': One of world's richest men leaves note to wife before killing himself over credit crunch
- The day the sea froze: Temperature plunges to MINUS 12C and forecasters say it won't warm up until Sunday
- Loner who built network of tunnels out of rubbish in his home dies 'after getting lost in labyrinth'
- We'll get 'Shameless' families out of bed and off to work in the morning, says Blears
- Boy, 12, dies after GPs refuse to make house call, telling mother to 'give him paracetamol'
- Drugs charity boss and her two sons ran 24-hour cocaine delivery service
- Cold war! Gas bills in Britain to soar as Russia switches off supply to 12 freezing countries
- The £1m-a-year motorway speed camera that is CAUSING accidents
- Revealed: The 27 M&S stores being axed after 7% sales slump
- One dead and two Good Samaritans fighting for their lives after motorway pile-up
- Darling's VAT cut had 'no effect whatsoever' on the high street, says scathing Next boss
- 'There's probably no God... now stop worrying and enjoy your life': Atheist group launches billboard campaign
- Owners of manors and farmhouses 'may need to cut prices by 25%'
- 200 bail hostels to open secretly in residential streets across Britain
- England cricket in chaos amid claims both captain Pietersen and coach have quit after row
- New internet crime maps for every part of England and Wales 'could become a burglar's guide'
- MICHAEL HANLON: Are energy-saving bulbs really going to save the planet?
- MOST READ IN DETAIL
Advertorials
MONEY EXTRA:
EDITOR'S SIX OF THE BEST
-
'It's not debatable,' they bawled. PETER HITCHENS on his chilling encounter with Britain's jack-booted paramilitary police
-
They're the carrier bag boots that could save the world... But would you actually wear them?
-
What credit crunch? Apple launches £1.6m diamond-encrusted iPhone
-
Vogue cover girl goes to court to force Google to unmask cyber-bully who branded her 'skank and a ho'
-
On-screen romance: Boyfriend's DVD proposal inspired by Love Actually
-
Utterly dotty: Dalmatians fan sells off beloved collection after split with husband

Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday, Evening Standard & Metro Media Group
The photographs published seem to show a brilliant mix of old and new. I understand that the objections are based on lack of planning permission and restrictions of the green belt, but other than that I presume it is a well designed, well contructed, solid, highly individual home.
If he can get it listed as a building of historical interest maybe he still stands a chance.
- Brendan, Melbourne, Australia, 26/1/2008 09:29