Inside 'Billionaires Row': London's rotting, derelict mansions worth £350m (2024)

A third of the mansions on the most expensive stretch of London's "Billionaires Row" are standing empty, including several huge houses that have fallen into ruin after standing almost completely vacant for a quarter of a century.

A Guardian investigation has revealed there are an estimated £350m worth of vacant properties on the most prestigious stretch of The Bishops Avenue in north London, which last year was ranked as the second most expensive street in Britain.

Inside 'Billionaires Row': London's rotting, derelict mansions worth £350m (1)

One property owner, the developer Anil Varma, has complained that the address has become "one of the most expensive wastelands in the world". At least 120 bedrooms are empty in the vacant properties.

The empty buildings include a row of 10 mansions worth £73m which have stood largely unused since they were bought between 1989 and 1993, it is believed on behalf of members of the Saudi royal family.

Exclusive access to now derelict properties has revealed that their condition is so poor in some cases that water streams down ballroom walls, ferns grow out of floors strewn with rubble from collapsed ceilings, and pigeon and owl skeletons lie scattered across rotting carpets.

Yet, despite the properties falling into serious disrepair, it is likely that the Saudi owners of the portfolio made a significant profit from the £73m sale. The records available show that one of the mansions was worth only £1.125m in 1988.

The avenue, close to exclusive Highgate and Hampstead, is home to Richard Desmond, owner of Express Newspapers and Channel 5, members of the Saudi royal family, and Poju Zabludowicz, a billionaire art collector and philanthropist.

Homes are on the market for up to £65m but there are also 16 unoccupied mansions. More still are only used by their owners for short periods each year. Most of the properties in the most expensive part of the avenue are registered to companies in tax havens including the British Virgin Islands, Curaçao, the Bahamas, Panama, and the Channel Islands, allowing international owners to avoid paying stamp duty on the purchase and to remain anonymous.

Inside 'Billionaires Row': London's rotting, derelict mansions worth £350m (3)

The revelations come at the same time as a growing political row over how empty properties can help solve a national housing shortage growing by more than 100,000 homes a year.

Boris Johnson has defied Downing Street to call for taxes to be cranked up on owners of vacant properties. He told City investors this month: "London homes aren't... just blocks of bullion in the sky." He called for owners to live in their homes or rent them out. But the government has resisted attempts by councils, backed by the mayor, to multiply council tax rates on homes left empty for two years.

The proportion of empty properties on the most prestigious stretch of The Bishops Avenue is 10 times higher than for the rest of England, which has 710,000 empty homes.

"This illustrates everything that is wrong with the London housing market," said David Ireland, chief executive of the Homes from Empty Homes campaign group. "The high values are being used as an extreme investment vehicle at the expense of homes being homes.

"London's shortage of homes is so great that this feels immoral and dysfuctional. There are countless people in inadequate housing and here are homes on The Bishops Avenue that could be used."

Inside 'Billionaires Row': London's rotting, derelict mansions worth £350m (4)

Unoccupied properties include a mansion seized following a high court judgment against a Kazakh businessman accused of a $6bn (£4.5bn) banking fraud and the repossessed home of the former Pakistani minister of privatisation, Waqar Ahmed Khan, where the windows have been sealed up with metal grilles.

Other houses show signs of limited habitation. The roof of one £10m home, registered in the name of a Saudi princess, is overgrown with plants and the signs on the ramshackle gates state it is under "24-hour manned guard".

"Not many true local residents live on the road," said Anil Varma, a property developer who is helping redevelop the former Saudi properties. "It is the likes of the royal families of Saudi Arabia and Brunei. They buy a property and don't do anything with it. No one has lived in some of these homes for 25 years and they are decaying. When we did the searches on some of them the water authorities said they had no records of any water being used."

Inside 'Billionaires Row': London's rotting, derelict mansions worth £350m (5)

One resident of the avenue, Magdy Adib Ishak-Hannah, an Egypt-born doctor, said he had never met his neighbours and believed as few as three of the properties were occupied full-time.

Another resident from Iran, who asked not to be named, said: "95% of the people who live here don't actually live here. It is a terrible place to live really. It is very boring and the road is very busy. I don't think many people want to live in such big houses anyway."

Inside 'Billionaires Row': London's rotting, derelict mansions worth £350m (6)

Estate agents and property developers said the avenue was in transition, with apartments under construction that would bring life back to the area, but said high vacancy rates were inevitable in an international market such as London where buyers come from the Middle East, Russia and increasingly China.

Trevor Abrahmsohn, an estate agent who has overseen 130 deals on The Bishops Avenue since 1976 through his company Glentree Estates, said any attempt to interfere with what owners do with their property would be wrong and the housing shortage should be tackled through reform of the planning system, wresting it from "political control".

He said: "Once you end people's right to buy something and do as they please with it you have a police state," he said. "One of the things people love about this country is its freedom and liberal views. You can't start affecting what people do with their assets. That is sacrosanct."

Inside 'Billionaires Row': London's rotting, derelict mansions worth £350m (7)

Andreas Panayitou, a property tycoon selling one of the empty mansions, Heath Hall, for £65m, believes The Bishops Avenue is improving and more people are starting to spend more time living there.

But he admitted that the derelict Saudi properties "really let the road down". He said he fully agreed with Boris Johnson that London homes were not "blocks of bullion".

He said: "You don't want empty streets and people just parking their money. You need people to live in them or rent them."

But he argued against increasing taxes on unoccupied homes, which he said would be an "annoyance" that would make buyers choose Monte Carlo or Milan instead of London.

Inside 'Billionaires Row': London's rotting, derelict mansions worth £350m (2024)

FAQs

What happened to the Billionaires Row? ›

EXCLUSIVEThe fall of Billionaire's Row: How one of Britain's most expensive streets has become a car park for tacky caravans as its once stunning mansions are left derelict and demolished.

Why is Bishops Avenue abandoned? ›

“Bishops Avenue is an area that they're always developing because a lot of owners of the houses are overseas sellers, some of them don't even come back to the UK so the houses get very dated and start falling apart and then they end up selling them,” one estate agent familiar with the road said.

Who lives in the Billionaires Row London? ›

Residents. Owners of houses on the street include the Sultan of Brunei and members of the House of Bolkiah, publisher and newspaper magnate Richard Desmond, art collector and philanthropist Poju Zabludowicz, industrialist Lakshmi Mittal, and property tycoon Andreas Panayiotou.

What is the most expensive house in Bishops Avenue? ›

According to Forbes, in 2006, the smallest houses in the street were selling for £5 million, while a larger house, Turkish tycoon Halis Toprak's 30,000 sq ft mansion, sold to the President of Kazakhstan, Nursultan Nazarbayev, for £50 million, in January 2008, making it one of the most expensive houses in the world.

Who actually lives on Billionaires Row? ›

15 Central Park West (CPW), two blocks east, contains units that have been purchased by billionaires Sara Blakely, Lloyd Blankfein, Omid Kordestani, Daniel Loeb, Daniel Och, Eyal Ofer, Pan Shiyi, Sandy Weill, Jerry Yang and Zhang Xin.

How many billionaires have gone to jail? ›

At least 11 billionaires or former billionaires have spent time behind bars. Here is what they did and how long they were in the clink.

Where is the largest abandoned mansion in America? ›

Lynnewood Hall is a 110-room Neoclassical Revival mansion in Elkins Park, Pennsylvania. Currently undergoing renovations after sitting nearly vacant for years, it was designed by architect Horace Trumbauer for industrialist Peter A. B. Widener and built between 1897 and 1900.

What's the most expensive house in London? ›

The lakefront trophy residence dubbed the Holme can be yours for an eye-watering £250 million ($298.5 million), the Financial Times first reported. Previously, the highest-priced pad to hit the market in Britain was a Knightsbridge property known as 2-8a Rutland Gate, which was listed for $221 million in October 2022.

Where do billionaire live in London? ›

The City of Westminster is recognized as one of the rich areas in London for a variety of reasons. It includes some of the upscale neighborhoods in London, such as Mayfair, Belgravia, and Knightsbridge, which are known for their luxury boutiques, fine dining establishments, and high-end real estate.

Who is the richest man of London? ›

Rich List 2023 top 10
RankNameWorth
1Gopi Hinduja and family£35bn
2Sir Jim Ratcliffe£29.688bn
3Sir Leonard Blavatnik£28.625bn
4David and Simon Reuben and family£24.399bn
6 more rows

Who owns London's most expensive houses? ›

£113 million

It would have been the most expensive home sold in London this year — but Aberconway House in Mayfair is reportedly about to be sold in a £138 million deal to billionaire Adar Poonawalla. Ownership of the property is shrouded in a complex web of offshore companies and non-disclosure agreements.

Why do billionaires love London? ›

This cultural richness adds to the city's allure for those who seek a cosmopolitan lifestyle. Education and Healthcare: Home to some of the world's best universities and medical facilities, London attracts billionaires who prioritize education and healthcare for their families.

Who lives on Kensington Palace Garden? ›

It is the residence of many ambassadors, including those of Saudi Arabia, UAE, and India. Famous residents included Israeli billionaire Noam Gottesman and Indian billionaire Lakshmi Mittal. Princess Haya of Jordan resides in a home in Kensington Palace Gardens.

Who owns most expensive property in NYC? ›

At the beginning of 2019, Ken Griffin's purchase at 220 Central Park South set a new record for the highest-priced home ever sold in the United States.

Where is the most expensive house in the United States? ›

It's quite a lot. Gordon Pointe, the most expensive home in the U.S., is a nine-acre estate with 22,800 square feet of living space. The property is listed as a "private oasis located in the exclusive neighborhood of Port Royal" in Naples, Florida.

How empty is Billionaires Row? ›

For this study, we analyzed recorded sales and known pending sales (contracts signed). In total, there are 772 condos that make up the market, of which 341, or 44%, remain unsold. The total value of all units is just over $17 billion of which $6.758 billion, 39.7%, is unsold.

How much of Billionaires Row is vacant? ›

However, despite this surplus of affluent individuals, the row of ultra-luxury apartments along 57th Street, also known as Billionaire's Row, remains half-empty. As of 2022, there are 772 unpurchased units.

How much does it cost to live in Billionaires Row? ›

Expect to pay $15 million to $30 million for entry-level apartments with direct unobstructed Central Park Views in many of these trophy buildings, although certain buildings, like One57, the pioneer in the neighborhood, and Central Park Tower, the tallest residential building in the Western Hemisphere, have some some ...

Can you walk down Billionaires Row? ›

Public can take walks there but no filming allowed. #london ##londonrealestate #travel #luxury #luxurylife #mostexpensive #home.

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