A careless driver has become the 15th motorist to demolish a three-foot garden wall of a pensioner's Grade II listed property. The fed-up owner of the home in Cambridge has blasted the council after her property has been continuously hit by motorists due to a lack of signs and road markings. Victoria Coldrey lives in an £800,000 farmhouse, which has a brick and flint wall around it, which has been hit a staggering 15 times. The 71-year-old has once again been left waiting in for the repair man after a driver once again lost control and struck it. Victoria Coldrey (pictured above) has become fed-up with the amount of motorists crashing into her wall Victoria's property (pictured above) which she has spent thousands of pounds on, due to the wall (left) which keeps being hit by motorists The wall (pictured above) after it was hit in September 2016. Victoria has appealed to the council to make the road safer so motorists know to slow dowb Bricks and debris can be seen scattered on the floor after the wall was also hit in June 2018 The wall can bee seen missing a large chunk from the centre, after it was hit in January 2019. Victoria said she had only just finished the repairs following this particular incident She said the driver of a Golf TDI fled the scene in the early hours of Sunday 12 May leaving her with £15,000 worth of damage to repair. Victoria highlighted that this isn't the first time a driver has smashed into wall which is next to a sharp bend on a 60mph limit, country road. Since she moved into the property nearly 20-years-ago she has experienced fifteen collisions, which in turn have cost her around £210,000 in repair works. The widow who lost her husband - a former Korean war veteran - December last year, added: 'It really is getting ridiculous. A car (pictured above) being taken away after it hit the wall outside Victoria's property on May 12 The wall is continuously being hit in the same place as Victoria says drivers don't know to slow down. Pictured above the wall when it was hit in September 2016 Victoria (pictured above) stated that specialist materials have to be used to fix the wall, which is why it costs so much money to rebuild Pictured above is the wall after it was rebuilt in 2018 following a series of collisions with motorists Each time a motorist hits the wall it leaves mess and rubble and takes a while to repair as warm weather is needed for the materials to dry (pictured above, the wall when it was hit in 2016) 'The wall was hit in the same place but more of it has been taken out this time. 'When these crashes happen bricks fly all over the place coming through the hedge and hitting the house.' Victoria previously worked with race horses and said she had only just finished repairing the wall from the last incident, which occurred in January. Victoria, who has experienced five accidents to her wall in the last two years, said: 'The first hit was 20-years-ago and this has since been an ongoing saga. Victoria (pictured above) has said she fears that someone might get killed if the council doesn't step in The wall has been subjected to constant damage (as above in September 2016) and Victoria said she has been campaigning for years to make it safer The picture above shows the damage which was done to the wall in the most recent hit in May. The two traffic bollards also appear to have been hit The motorists are destroying most of the wall (above in January 2019) and the council has said they are aware of the issues 'It takes around three months to build every time. 'It takes so long to fix. It has to be done by a specialist using lime mortar which means you have to wait for it dry.' She highlighted how due to the materials being used to rebuild the wall, it was crucial for builders to wait for dry weather. 'It is so fiddly and it cost a lot of money all of this', she added. Victoria (pictured above) stands on the inside of her garden where the bricks from the wall have fallen in Victoria lives in the only house on the road at Park Farm Corner, in Chippenham, which is a country road with a 60mph speed limit. Her five-bedroom-home is located on a sharp bend where she claims drivers will 'not slow down' as 'there is no warning sign, so they will skid and crash'. She added: 'Drivers don't realise how sharp the bend is - they just go too fast. 'And every time a driver crashes the car, their car is off the ground and on top of the wall. 'I have had all kinds of drivers crash into my wall, often more men than women.' She said it wasn't a certain type of person that was crashing and it was someone different every time, she also highlighted her concerns. 'It just worries me that somebody might get killed. 'I could be standing there, or my dog as well.' Victoria said she has been campaigning 'for years' to make the road she lives on safer. She is 'furious' that her appeals to Cambridgeshire County Council's highways department to put in measures to make the bend near her home safer. She said she has also spoken to Chippenham Parish Council, the police and police and crime commissioner and her MP Lucy Frazer to help. Victoria added: 'They just won't do anything, it is ridiculous. Not even a warning sign or road markings.' Victoria also said people no longer ride horse down the road due to the danger the lack of signs pose (pictured above, the wall when it was hit in September 2016) Victoria said the council 'wont do anything' to prevent the wall being hit (pictured above the wall in September 2016) Victoria has been campaigning for measures to slow down drivers including warning signs on the verge and 'slow' to be written on the road, warning drivers of the bend. She even admitted that people don't ride horses down the road anymore due to how dangerous it has become. 'The current signs are not far enough away and some drivers are still going up to 50mph when they get here. 'The approach to the bend isn't marked and there is no warning explaining that there is a bend. Victoria (pictured above) said she has spoken to everyone she can about the lack of signs on the road Victoria has suggested that the council change the tarmac on the road (pictured above the wall after it was hit in September 2016) 'If they changed the tarmac this would stop all problems. On the road nearby which kept having accidents, they changed it to non-slip tarmac and they haven't had any problems since. It is ridiculous. 'I have spoken to the county council, highways, commissioner of police, everyone and nobody can do anything about it. 'You would think that the highways would get the message by now. It is pathetic.' A Cambridgeshire County Council spokesperson said: 'We are aware of the issues at Park Farm corner in Chippenham, and are working closely with the residents, parish council and police to identify suitable measures that can be put in place.' All rights reserved for this news site dailymail and under his responsibility