
Leeanne Campbell and Dale Elphick said they were sad to leave their six-bedroom manor on Dyers Pass Rd, Cashmere, but were also pleased it was in safe hands.
"We are really excited that it's going to a family, and I think they intend to live in it a long time – some new kings and queens and princes and princesses at The Castle," they told OneRoof.co.nz.
Campbell said the timing of the sale couldn’t have been better; they settle in mid-May and move to Melbourne at the start of June to be closer to their grandchild.
The buyers had been looking for a large home for quite some time, and then spotted the historic manor on Dyers Pass Rd, OneRoof reported.

"The [buyer] has quite a few kids, and it works perfectly," Ray White listing agent Mark Lambie told OneRoof.
Lambie could not disclose the sale price until after settlement, but confirmed it was well in excess of the property's RV of $1.67m.
He said much of the interest had come from large and extended families in Christchurch, as well as people who wanted to run it as an accommodation business.
"The feedback was that it was a really warm and inviting home, and a lot of people said once they went through it, they appreciated it a lot more rather than just looking at the photos – the history and the feel of the home."

The couple never thought they would be in a position to buy a manor, but the one on Dyers Pass Rd was damaged in the earthquakes and was within their reach.
They recalled seeing it for the first time.
"We came and had a look at it and looked over the fence, and it was ‘Oh my God!’," Campbell said.
The home had been propped up with emergency bracing and plywood, which blocked access to the front entrance.
"It was like a big broken fairytale [castle]."

"It was a massive project," Elphick told OneRoof.
"Everything needed doing. It was structural and cosmetic."
The couple eventually opened a luxury bed and breakfast at the property at the end of 2019 and had been doing well until Covid struck three months later.
"When Covid hit, all the tourists left, and we didn’t know what to do," Elphick said.
They were forced to adapt their business model and have been letting four of the six rooms to long-term tenants ever since.
The manor was originally built in 1908 by a confectioner, but over the years it has been home to lawyers, judges and doctors.
Said Campbell: "We are very ordinary people – we just got lucky."
The couple are also extremely proud of what they created.
"It’s really like living in a fairytale. We walk around going, ‘Wow, it’s just so beautiful’," Elphick said.
Campbell said the plan was to rent in Melbourne and work out what the exchange rate was doing before deciding to buy across the ditch.
-Allied Media











