The Repair Shop star Dominic Chinea has suffered a series of setbacks with his Land Rover restoration and VW Caddy restoration projects at his Cornwall workshop
The Repair Shop‘s engineering expert Dominic Chinea confessed “it’s getting worse and worse” as he revealed the latest developments in his Land Rover restoration project.
The engineering specialist has been painstakingly restoring a run-down 1957 Series 1 Land Rover that he discovered buried in a hedge close to his new home in Cornwall. He has described it as one of the most demanding projects he has ever undertaken, given that the chassis was completely rotten and the vehicle had been half-submerged in undergrowth for a number of years.
Dominic hasn’t exactly been blessed with good fortune during the rebuild. Just a few weeks ago, he acknowledged hitting a significant setback after accidentally causing damage to the Land Rover’s seat base while lifting the rear tub.
He revealed he was considering enlisting the help of Repair Shop colleague and upholstery specialist Sonnaz Nooranvary before the Land Rover could be deemed finished.
However, Dominic’s troubles with the Land Rover restoration aren’t his sole headache at present, as he has encountered a second mishap with his vintage VW Caddy.
The BBC star is something of a motoring enthusiast, with his impressive collection including a 1957 Porsche 356a, multiple Land Rovers (Series 1 and Defender 110), a 13-window VW camper, a 1958 VW split bus, and a 1936 BSA motorbike. Among the various vehicles currently being restored in Dominic’s new workshop is an early Eighties Volkswagen Caddy pickup.
Back in February, successive storms triggered a serious accident in his new workshop, inflicting considerable damage to the Mk1 Caddy. Dominic explained: “Previously, during the last storm, part of the roof flew off of the workshop and landed on the Caddy, smashed into the bonnet. It made a hole in the bonnet, dented the wing, and I was gutted.”
He went on to reveal that the reinforced concrete beams supporting his workshop’s structure are becoming increasingly deteriorated: “The steel rebar is getting rusty and swelling up and it’s breaking the concrete and a chunk of that has fallen off the roof.
“Of course, it’s landed on the windscreen of the Caddy and broken the windscreen.”
Dominic took responsibility for the incident, noting that he’d recently had work carried out to install a ramp into the workshop, and that vibrations from the machinery may have dislodged the loose lump of concrete. “That is my stupid fault,” he said. “I should have put something a board over [the cars] or moved them outside or something like that.”
Dominic admitted that following this latest setback he was on the verge of abandoning the pickup altogether: “I may well sell it because I haven’t really used it since I’ve been down here and I feel bad that the poor thing is just getting worse and worse whilst it’s here.”
He appealed to his followers, confessing he had little idea what the vehicle might fetch on the open market, saying: “Make me an offer.”

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