A decade after the passing of David Bowie, the world continues to celebrate his musical milestones and chameleonic legacy. However, in the quiet Warwickshire village of Binley Woods, the "Thin White Duke" is remembered for a far more terrestrial contribution: a £10,116 donation toward the local village hall car park.

According to a report by the BBC, the unlikely connection began in 2014 when Norman Miller, then a member of the village hall committee, decided to write to Bowie with a bold request. Hoping to raise funds for a much-needed car park, Miller invited the superstar to perform a benefit concert at the humble village hall.

While Bowie’s son, filmmaker Duncan Jones, initially replied that his father was not taking on new work due to his health, Miller was undeterred. Over the next two years, he sent a steady stream of letters filled with family anecdotes, local football updates about the Coventry City "Sky Blues," and jokes.

On January 10, 2016—the day Bowie passed away—Miller received an unexpected follow-up from Jones. The family revealed that Miller’s persistent correspondence had not been in vain; the letters and jokes had genuinely brightened the singer's final days. In a gesture of "marketing genius" and profound gratitude, the estate offered the village exactly £10,116—a figure reflecting the date of his death (10/1/16).

"I went to the bank and showed them the letter," Miller told the BBC, admitting he originally feared it was a scam. "They said they'd opened an account with nothing in it, and then the money was transferred the day he died."

Paul Salisbury, chair of the parish council, confirmed the funds covered the crucial deposit for the construction. A decade later, the site remains affectionately known by locals as "the car park David Bowie paid for." Without that final gift, Salisbury notes, the project likely would have remained an unfinished jigsaw. It stands as a quirky, heartfelt testament to the power of a well-timed joke and the quiet generosity of a global icon.

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