UK Mole Man who lived in tunnels under crumbling home for 40 years

Hackney moleman

William Lyttle was also known as the ‘Hackney Mole Man’. (Image: Alan Denney/Creative Commons)

For nearly 40 years, , dubbed the “Hackney Mole Man,” secretly dug an extraordinary network of tunnels beneath his home.

What started as a plan to create a wine cellar spiraled into an obsession that would see him burrowing up to 60 feet under his Victorian villa on .

Lyttle, an Irish civil engineer, inherited the 20-room house in the 1960s and began digging.

By the time authorities intervened, he had removed 100 cubic meters of earth, causing parts of the pavement to collapse and sparking safety fears among neighbours.

In 2006, Hackney Council evicted him, citing structural concerns. Engineers removed 33 tons of debris, including a car and a boat, from the tunnels before sealing them with concrete.

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hackney moleman house

The dilapidated entrance to the Mole Man’s old home. (Image: Daniel2005/Creative Commons)

But Lyttle didn’t go quietly. Neighbors recalled seeing him sneak back into the house at night, using crowbars and chain cutters to access his beloved tunnels.

“He’d slip in through the corrugated iron with a torch,” longtime neighbor Tom Costello told . “He didn’t care about eviction; he was a rebel.”

Lyttle’s eccentric digging was a big menace to the neighbourhood. Once, he accidentally hit a 450-volt cable, plunging the street into darkness.

Neighbors joked he was “digging his way to Barclays” bank, but many were unnerved by the subsiding pavement and relentless drilling.

However, Lyttle’s behavior wasn’t just odd – it was also controversial. Former tenants claimed he acted inappropriately, with some exchange students reportedly shouting at him on the street.

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Moleman house

In 2012, artist Sue Webster purchased the structurally unstable property for £1.12 million. (Image: Chris Whippet/Wikimedia Commons)

Artist Karen Russo, who worked with Lyttle in 2007, described him as “paranoid and misogynistic,” adding that their collaboration ended after he became violent toward her, reports.

Following his eviction, Lyttle was rehoused in a flat, where he reportedly began digging again.

He passed away in 2010, leaving behind a bizarre legacy and a hefty £500,000 council bill to repair the damage.

In 2012, artist Sue Webster purchased the structurally unstable property for £1.12 million.

Renovated by Adjaye Associates, the newly named “Mole House” has since been transformed into an award-winning, three-story live-work space, even receiving the Best Dwelling category at the New London Awards in 2021.

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