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by Simon Barnes

Demand for private jet luxury takes off

Oprah Winfrey once said, “It’s great to have a private jet. Anyone who tells you that having your own private jet isn’t great is lying to you.”

First came luxury city penthouses, then superyachts, now it’s the turn of the private luxury jet as millionaires and billionaires commission designers to create a bespoke home in the skies. Interiors, featuring seat belts made from 24 carat gold as in Donald Trump’s Boeing 757 and hand-stitched leather seats from Bill Amberg are among the latest ‘must-haves’.

private jet

Last year, a Boeing 747-8 was acquired by an UHNWI for around £230 million, subsequent improvement work which totalled some £160 million undertaken by Greenpoint Technologies, took around three years, and brought the overall spend to around £400 million.

The aircraft, which has the capacity to carry up to 450 passengers, has been converted into a private jet for the unknown private owner to include everything you would normally find on board a luxury super yacht. The interior refit and redesign incorporates a restaurant, dining room, a bright and airy master bedroom and guest bedrooms, two large living areas and a private office which is designed like a conference room. There is generous entertaining space with large walkways inside and up on deck, together with a ‘chill-out’ zone.

private jet

Boeing’s Aeroloft provides private sleeping berths located above the main deck in the aft section of the plane, where the design features custom designed interior furnishings and a forward entry staircase.

Private clients, royalty and heads of state are in the business of commissioning high end designers to create luxurious yet practical interiors for their private jets and helicopters. They want to replicate the attention to detail and bespoke finishing of the interiors in their super prime residences around the world. Specialist Mayfair company VIP Completions is one such design company creating masterpieces in the skies an traditional established interior designers, such as Linley London have, over recent years, been commissioned to design interiors for the wealthy’s yachts and planes.

Filed Under: Luxury, Simon Barnes’ Property Scrapbook Tagged With: Bill Amberg, Greenpoint Technologies, Linley London, private jet

by Simon Barnes

Amalgamating property – two houses into one

Simon Barnes on amalgamating property in Prime Central London, a trend being followed by buyers, investors and celebrities.

Belgravia and Mayfair are peppered with large grand residences and mews houses which date back to Georgian and Victorian times when each big house would own a mews houses to accommodate by staff, horses and carriage. In wartime years and the post war era over time these large residences were deemed impractical and too expensive to maintain and gradually mews houses were sold off separately.

Today, the mews house is very much an established property ‘genre’ – often quirky, ‘cool’ and well located in a prime central yet quiet cobbled street. However, now the property cycle has come full circle and increasingly there is a demand from buyers with bottomless budgets to reclaim and ‘marry’ back the mews house with the main residence, restoring both to their former glory.  In doing this, hungry buyers gain increased security and privacy, essential private parking and staff accommodation, all part of everyday luxury living in Prime Central London.

Mews houses - amalgamating property
Mews houses in London

For example, take Green Street a mixture of traditional red brick houses, then changing to Portland stone.  Behind the period façades only a handful of these houses enjoy a wonderful outlook over a private communal garden, while some look over a school or neighbouring property, but this is a secret few share.

The trend to sell off and convert mews houses over the years has not escaped Mayfair, so again knowing where to find these prized houses still in possession of their own mews is something of a skill. Take Charles Street with its seemingly narrow houses, insiders know there are just a sprinkling of houses including their original mews house.


Amalgamating Property in Prime Central London

A little while back, H. Barnes & Co bought a house in Upper Grosvenor Street dating back to the late 1700’s. The main house had become too expensive to maintain with families having moved out years before and offices taking the space over before becoming empty for a number of years. Originally, the house had also owned the mews house, which subsequently was sold many years before.

For us it made no sense to buy one without the other. Eventually, we secured the mews house despite the present owner being reluctant to sell but tempted by a generous offer from us.  We were prepared to pay a reasonable premium in order to secure the mews because collectively the overall end result of having both the large main house and mews under the same ownership was always the objective.

Amalgamating Property
Traditional town houses in London

There are increasing instances where owners are amalgamating property to create vast acres of lateral space.  However, with restrictions from English Heritage and the floor-plate of typical London townhouses, this can be a difficult scenario with underwhelming results.

While such a large scale project may result in accommodation that works for the individual owner and family, it is often a less tempting prospect for buyers because in the reconfiguration space tends to wasted or not utilised in the way that another person requires. This means that a very expensive project can also cost you buyers, as in the case of Jamie Oliver, who knocked two houses into one in Primrose Hill.

Filed Under: Advice Tagged With: amalgamating property, English Heritage, Jamie Oliver, mews houses, Primrose Hill, town houses

by Simon Barnes

This Summer’s Swankiest Holiday Rental

To create the perfect holiday rental property for the discerning client in exclusive destinations, property owners are now not only building phenomenal houses but also retaining the services of world class interior designers designers and architects.

Armani designed interiors at Villa Armani Casa, St Tropez
Armani designed interiors at Villa Armani Casa, St Tropez – photo credit Massimo Listri

Joshua Buckley of H. Barnes & Co observes: “Typically properties at this level were designed, especially their interiors, with function durability in mind for the purpose of such rentals. However in this competitive and now demanding high end level of the market, owners are prepared to create the ultimate luxury for their holiday clients. Take Villa Armani Casa, an exceptional property located in the centre of town in St. Tropez. Created from the ground up eight years ago, this house was a design personally by Giorgio Armani complete with bespoke furniture and unique features that have this property exceed expectation.”

Villa Armani Casa St Tropez
Villa Armani Casa St Tropez pool view at twilight – photo credit Massimo Listri

Holiday Rental – Villa Armani Casa

Additional features and services include:
  • swimming pool with moveable floor
  • Brazilian marble bathrooms
  • Armani designed minimalist kitchen
  • silk bespoke Armani furniture
  • house keeper
  • house manager/butler
  • chef
  • concierge services

DOWNLOAD BROCHURE

Filed Under: Saint Tropez, Simon Barnes’ Property Scrapbook Tagged With: Armani, holiday rentals

by Simon Barnes

Shepherd Market puts the May in Mayfair

Described as ‘the Heart of Mayfair’ by many local residents, Shepherd Market is a charming small square and piazza, discreetly positioned between Piccadilly and Curzon Street. Originally it dates back to 1735-46 when Edward Shepherd developed it on a plot of land that had been used for the 15 day May Fair held every year and from which Mayfair takes its name.

Shepherd Market Mayfair

For many years, the area of Shepherd Market was considered one of bad repute and infamous for its sex trade. Today it is home to a variety of boutique shops, restaurants and impressive Victorian pubs. A plethora of nationalities are clustered in this small area offering the opportunity to take an international culinary tour, from first class Lebanese, Turkish and Iranian to authentic Italian cooking at Misto and some of the finest French cuisine in London at Le Boudin Blanc. The exteriors of these eateries are understated, which reflects the area of Shepherd’s Market – it is a genuine hidden gem with a relaxed village like feel.

Shepherd Street is home to famous British racing driver, Sir Stirling Moss, who lives in one of the first buildings on the left as you pass through a small archway leading into Shepherd Street. His local stands on the corner, ‘Shepherd’s Tavern Pub’, dating back to 1735. In Curzon Street stands the Saudi Arabian Embassy, occupying an original mansion in Mayfair called ‘Crewe House’, almost directly situated on the original site of the May Fair.

Shepherd Market


The Rise of Shepherd Market

In the roaring 1920’s this part of London was a fashionable haunt and home to some charismatic and eccentric residents taken directly from a Noel Coward play or novel by Evelyn Waugh. In fact it has several literary associations, Half Moon Street is close by and was where P G Wodehouse chose to make the residence for Jeeves and Wooster.

Armenian born, Michael Arlen was a tenant opposite the Ye Grapes pub and used Shepherd Market as the setting for his novel, ‘The Green Hat’, which become a play on Broadway starring Katharine Cornell, and a London West End stage production starring Tallulah Bankhead.  In 1925 Greta Garbo starred in a silent film version of the novel, renamed A Woman of Affairs. This Victorian pub retains its original period features with attractive glazed tiles and leadlight windows. Novelist Nancy Mitford one worked at the Heywood Hill famous book shop and ‘Trumpers’  is one of London’s most well-known gentleman’s hairdressers.

Filed Under: Simon Barnes’ Property Scrapbook Tagged With: Crew House, Greta Garbo, Heywood Hill, Katharine Cornell, Le Boudin Blanc, May Fair\, Mayfair, Michael Arlen, Shephert Market, Sir Stirling Moss, Tallulah Bankhead, The Green Hat, Trumpers, Ye Grapes

by Simon Barnes

Mayfair is revelling in its transformation

Mayfair has always been one of London’s most sought after post codes, but over recent years the look and feel…and crucially the character has changed quite dramatically.

Mayfair  has undergone a major cash injection with a comprehensive transformation, notably targeting the areas of Mount Street and Shepherd Market.  These areas have been turned into chic modern enclaves boasting designer names, bespoke retailers and all things beautiful and luxurious with a village atmosphere away from the frenetic West End.

Berkeley Square, Mayfair
Berkeley Square, Mayfair

Richard Caring, no stranger to Mayfair, spent more than £15m on his latest restaurant venture, Sexy Fish, turning the former Natwest bank building on the corner of Berkeley Square into a feast for the eyes .  The restaurant is certainly sufficiently ‘bling’ to attract a string of celebrities, Russian oligarchs and bankers’ wives who lunch.  The extravagant interiors include a golden ceiling, an Iranian floor, works of art that include a sparkling crocodile by Frank Gehry and a Damien Hirst mermaid and one of the largest fish tanks lining the walls of the private dining room in the basement.

Across the square long established Annabel’s nightclub continues to attract devotees, as do the discerning Scotts and Harry’s Bar.

Property in Mayfair

Until recently property transactions in Mayfair would typically be very much ‘under the radar’ – individual units in mansion blocks or big house sales with no significant developments to speak of.  That has changed with Finchatton’s high profile Grosvenor Square development , which is achieving as much as £6000 per square foot, and John Caudwell’s  plans to transform the multi storey carpark in Audley Street into one of London’s most exciting residential developments.

Filed Under: Mayfair, Prime Areas Tagged With: Annabel's, Audley Street, Mayfair, Mount Street, Property in Mayfair, Sexy Fish, Shepherd Market

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