The UK’s most expensive house – a 45-room “private palace” overlooking Hyde Park – is up for sale nearly three years after it was sold to a Chinese billionaire for more than £200m.
The Guardian understands that at least five prospective buyers toured the seven-storey Knightsbridge property since it was quietly put on the market in the last few weeks.
Sources familiar with the sale process said “Middle Eastern royal families and super-rich American investors” were among those who have looked round the 2-8a Rutland Gate property, which was built as four grand family homes in the 1830s before being converted into one vast residence in the 1980s.
The property was sold for a record £205m in January 2020. The estate agent who brokered the deal announced the buyer was Cheung Chung-kiu, the founder and chairman of CC Land Holdings, a Hong Kong-listed company that owns property in China and the UK, including the “Cheesegrater” office block in central London.
However, the Financial Times earlier on Friday reported that five sources had identified Hui Ka Yan, the founder, chairperson and majority shareholder of Evergrande, as the ultimate owner. Evergrande, which has been plunged into crisis over mounting debts and falling property prices, did not respond to requests for comment.
Hui has been quickly selling an array of assets, including other properties across the world and two private jets, as he grapples with the crisis at Evergrande.
Planning permission has been granted to redevelop the property, which has fallen into disrepair since its former owner Prince Sultan bin Abdul-Aziz, of Saudi Arabia, died in 2011, into an eight-storey, 5,760-sq metre (62,000-sq-ft) “private palace”.
Plans for the building show it will have a triple-height
Read more on theguardian.com