Charity converting paralysed father's Solihull home

Rob Lamb Rob LambRob Lamb

A charity is set to transform the home of a father-of-four left paralysed after a fall.

Rob Lamb, 58, suffered a severe spinal cord injury when he fainted in October, leaving him paralysed from the chest down.

He has been recovering at a rehabilitation centre in Oswestry, Shropshire, but is due to return home.

On Saturday, 60 volunteers began adapting his Solihull home to enable him to live there safely.

Builders at Rob Lamb's home
It will take nine days to convert the home

Rob, who was widowed when his wife Julie died suddenly in 2017, lives with sons Callum, Gavin and Mackenzie.

Members of the Band of Builders charity are set to spend nine days converting the home, creating a downstairs bedroom and wet room complete with specialist equipment.

Band of Builders Callum Lamb, Gavin Lamb, Robert Lamb, Robert's late wife Julie, Tara Lamb and Mackenzie Lamb.Band of Builders
Robert Lamb, pictured third left, with Callum, Gavin, his late wife Julie, Tara and Mackenzie

Gavin Lamb said: "We've been overwhelmed by the support we've received and still can't quite believe this is all happening.

"When dad first got injured, we knew we'd need to make huge changes to the house for him to come home, so we started fundraising for those and for the care that he'll need. Then Band of Builders stepped in and it's taken a huge weight off."

Builders at Rob Lamb's home
About 60 volunteers will transform the home

Charity volunteer Craig Cashmore said it was one of the biggest projects the charity had done.

He added: "It's so important that the home he comes back to isn't just safe, but is somewhere he can live comfortably and happily."

Presentational grey line

Follow BBC West Midlands on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Send your story ideas to: [email protected]