Illegally built and ‘delusional’ Tuscan-style property must be destroyed within 18 months

This article is more than 1 year old

This article is more than 1 year old

A court has ordered the owner of a €57m (£49m) chateau in the south of France to tear it down after declaring the building illegal.

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Chateau Diter in Grasse, which began life as a 200 sq metre abandoned country house with snake-infested grounds, has been transformed into a Tuscan-style property with a swimming pool and heliport.

However, court of appeal judges in Aix-en-Provence found the building was built without permission in a protected woodland and said it must be destroyed in the next 18 months.

Its owner, the property developer Patrick Diter, also faces a €450,000 fine to be increased by €500 for every day he does not comply after the 18-month deadline.

At Diter’s trial in January, the assistant public prosecutor, Pierre-Jean Gaury, said the transformation of the property was a “pharaonic project, delusional, totally illegal and built in an illegal manner”.

Gaury said the construction was carried out in violation of urban planning regulations as well as of safety and environmental rules by an owner whose “only concern is money”.

Diter agreed to demolish any building constructed without permission and admitted he made some mistakes. He was taken to court after neighbours complained about noise when the chateau was rented out for major film productions and weddings at €50,000 per evening. The court awarded the neighbours €45,000 in damages.

Diter, who lives at Chateau Diter with his wife Monica, told Paris Match in 2017 he acquired the property in 2000 after failing to find a suitable home in Tuscany.

He sold the abandoned house, the main property on the land, to an English couple and spent the next 10 years developing the farmhouse and outbuildings into a 1,000 sq metre abode.