
Zendaya has an embarrassing moment as she's rejected entry to upscale restaurant in Rome because of her outfit In April its general manager Peter Grant vowed to complete all homes it had started. Rawdon Hill marketed itself as a low-volume builder with 46 years of experience. The couple have been married for 40 years. 'Help us out, we need someone,' Mr Schultz pleaded. He felt 'rocked completely' as he had 'promised' the home as a place for them both to feel 'proud' of but now that dream had slipped away. Mr Schultz, who is his wife's carer, said the expression on her face when they found out Rawdon Hill was out of business was 'the same look' as when she received her shocking cancer diagnosis. She admitted their housing disaster was yet another setback that left her unsure of their immediate future, saying she felt 'sick' and that 'I can't cope'.

'I had something to look forward to but now I feel like I don’t have anything,' Mrs Schultz told A Current Affair. Mrs Schultz, who was given five years to live after a lung cancer diagnosis 18 months ago, says the company's demise has left her without hope. Rawdon Hill had also pledged to 'help' customers devastated by the collapse of another builder, Porter Davis, which left 1,500 homes unfinished. The Hallam-based company had promoted its business as 'thriving' only one day before it appointed Dye & Co as liquidators. The couple are renting and have issued a desperate plea for help as their development sits empty and incomplete.

Pictured, the fence surrounding the couple's incomplete home Bill and Bridget Schultz's planned home in the La Trobe Valley is left unfinished after builder Rawdon Hill went bust on May 25.
