logo
Inside a London mansion that's been home to history

Inside a London mansion that's been home to history

Time of India25-04-2025

Big Motoring World founder Peter
Waddell
is putting his historic, Greater London country estate on the market. Holwood House, which has been the residence of a prime minister and hosted scientists and statesman, is listed with Knight Frank for £23.5 million ($31.1 million).
#Pahalgam Terrorist Attack
Pakistan suspends Simla pact: What it means & who's affected
What is India's defence muscle if it ever has to attack?
Can Pakistan afford a full-scale war with India?
The 59-year-old-Waddell, who says he's retiring and going to live full time in Spain—where he has a replica of Holwood House—has a story to tell about when he first bought the place in 2018. It coincided with another big event in his life: the birth of his son.
Waddell recounts a conversation with his financial adviser, who told him to stop leaving all his money in the bank and suggested that he buy a bigger house.
'I was waiting for the baby to arrive at the Portland Hospital and went on [property website] Rightmove and saw the house and knew that was it,' says Waddell. He went out to see the house the day after his son was born and was impressed by the sheer scale of the home and the privacy it offered.
'I liked the house, but I told the agent I have one problem, and he said, 'What's that?'—sort of sighing like, 'Here we go, another time waster,'' Waddell explains, adding that he told the agent: 'My wife just had a baby, so I can't drag her out of bed today to see the house. Can we come back in a week's time?'
Waddell and his wife did come back a week later and ended up making the purchase for around £8.5 million, according to
Land Registry
public records. He says he's spent some £18 million on renovations and improvements.
Seven years later, he's put the property on the market. A buyer gets a 25,000-square-foot home with seven bedrooms, five bathrooms and 40 acres of grounds with additional staff accommodation. The list price is less than the total Waddell says he spent on the house including renovations, but London's housing market has been under pressure from taxes, the trade war and high interest rates.
Waddell owns one of the finest country houses in South East England now, but he doesn't come from wealth. He grew up in a children's home in Scotland and moved to London when he was just 16. He launched his business in the 1980s with a small car showroom that he expanded into a multimillion-dollar automotive business.
Inside the House
Holwood House is set on a gated private road that meanders through mature oaks. Waddell says he instructed staff to plant some 68,000 daffodil bulbs along the approach, which were in bloom in early April.
The house has two floors and an extensive basement, which includes cardio and weight gyms, a wine cellar and substantial storage space. The entrance opens into a grand entry hall, with one hallway leading into the bespoke Clive Christian kitchen and the other into a wing used primarily for entertainment.
In that wing, there's a drawing room, a games room with a snooker table as well as Waddell's favorite part of the home—the cinema room with lounge reclining seating, where he can kick his feet up and relax. 'We spent hundreds of thousand of pounds on the cinema room,' says Waddell. 'We have a moving screen and acoustics all done by a company called
Synergy Controls
who do all the billionaire houses in London.'
There's also an indoor swimming pool, a wet lounge, a changing room and a sauna on the ground floor. The pool area opens onto the porch, where there are sun loungers to relax on on a warm day. Outside, there's a tennis court, a walled garden and a new machinery warehouse for tractors and lawn equipment.
Up the grand staircase on the second floor, there are seven bedrooms. The principal suite, which offers views to the parkland, includes his and hers dressing rooms.
Peter Jr.'s bedroom is on the second floor, too; Waddell installed special features in the wing for his son, such as a bathtub that lights up and plays music.
It's all part of what he characterizes as technological investments to make the home suitable for his family, both for security purposes—like biometric entrances with thumbprints—and touches of fun and personality.
'Just to give you an example, if you are driving up the road with me, and I said, 'What's your favorite color?' And you say to me, 'Pink.' From my phone, I can press a button, and when you arrive at the gates, the gardens, the house, the whole area will light up in pink.'
There's also a four-car garage on the property, filled with Ferraris and Bentleys, but Waddell says he recently won a prolonged battle with the local council to get permission to build a £20 million garage to host his fleet of supercars.
'It's taken me five years and a lot of money to get permissions,' says Waddell. The garage has not been built.
About the History
Waddell's house is in the South East London borough of Bromley, around 14 miles from the financial district of Canary Wharf. On a fast train, it takes 18 minutes from Orpington Station to
London Bridge
station, but Waddell says he's preferred to travel by helicopter and frequently lands a chopper on the grounds.
'You can park at Chelsea Harbor in the helicopter port. You can be there in four minutes and then shortly at Harrods afterwards,' he says.
Holwood House is Grade I listed, meaning the highest level of importance, and there is a impressive list of significant historical figures who've owned or visited the property.
The UK's youngest prime minister, William Pitt, first bought the property in 1785 for £8,950—about £1.2 million in today's money, based on the Bank of England's inflation calculator. In May 1787, Pitt met with his close friend the abolitionist campaigner William Wilberforce on the grounds under an oak tree, and Wilberforce told Pitt of his intentions to bring a bill to the House of Commons to abolish the slave trade.
In the 1820s, the house was demolished and rebuilt under a new owner, who enlisted the era's fashionable architect Decimus Burton to design it in the Greek Revival style. Charles Darwin was a frequent visitor to the newly built property, and he would conduct experiments and have picnics on the expansive grounds. Later, Winston Churchill dined at the house, which was under threat of bombing during World War II due to its close proximity to Biggin Hill Airport.
'The house is so big and beautiful and has loads of history,' says Waddell.
As to who will be the next owner, Waddell thinks it will likely be someone in business, especially given the house's easy commute to the City of London, or another notable person. 'We've had a few offers before, but we weren't ready to sell. We've had a few footballers, a few actors who made offers, but I wasn't selling then.'
It was Waddell's family home, and he wasn't ready to part with it. 'But now I'm retired,' he says. 'I don't need two big homes. I only need one.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Every 30th adult now a millionare: UAE adds 13,000 dollar millionaires in 2024
Every 30th adult now a millionare: UAE adds 13,000 dollar millionaires in 2024

Time of India

time5 days ago

  • Time of India

Every 30th adult now a millionare: UAE adds 13,000 dollar millionaires in 2024

In 2024, the UAE gained 13,000 millionaires, bringing the total to 240,000 with $785 billion in wealth/ Image: X The United Arab Emirates continued its meteoric rise on the global wealth map in 2024, adding approximately 13,000 new millionaires, according to the UBS Global Wealth Report 2025 , released Wednesday. This fresh wave of high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) pushed the UAE's millionaire count to a striking 240,343, marking a 5.8% year-on-year increase. This growth makes the UAE the second-fastest-growing millionaire market, trailing only Türkiye, which experienced an 8.4% rise. A good number of these newly created millionaire base in the UAE came about from re-locations, as has been the case for four years now. Aaccording to the Swiss bank: 'In 2024, Turkey stands out from the crowd thanks to an 8.4% increase in its number of dollar millionaires over 2023, equivalent to a boost of roughly 7,000 people in a single year. The UAE (had) a rise of 5.8% in millionaire numbers, thanks to approximately 13,000 new entrants in this category.' To put it in human terms: According to Worldometers data, the UAE's population grew by 385,048 last year. While the total population is estimated at around 11 million, adults in their prime working years (25-54) number a substantial 7.28 million. With such a high concentration of wealth, effectively about one in every 30 adults or economically active individuals in the UAE is a millionaire. Where the Wealth Lives: UAE's $785 Billion in Private Hands The country's HNWIs now collectively control about $785 billion (Dh2.88 trillion) in wealth. Meanwhile, the average wealth per adult in the UAE currently stands at $147,663. According to the report: 62% of this wealth is held in financial assets, from equities and bonds to private investments. The remaining 48% resides in non-financial assets, primarily real estate and land, long considered pillars of wealth preservation in the Gulf. This concentration of wealth is clearly reflected in the UAE's property and investment markets. According to Knight Frank, a notable influx of high-net-worth individuals from Saudi Arabia, India, China, and the UK is driving larger, multi-million dollar deals, particularly in premium locations such as Jumeira Bay Island. Paul Donovan, Chief Economist at UBS Global Wealth Management, in a statement highlighted the broader implications of this capital accumulation: 'Wealth is not just an economic measure – it's a social and political force. As we navigate the fourth industrial revolution and rising public debt, the way wealth is distributed and transferred will shape opportunity, policy, and progress.' Generational Shifts: $19 Billion in Wealth Transfers Expected One particularly notable trend in the UAE is the coming wave of wealth transfers. UBS estimates that the country will see $19 billion (Dh70 billion) in intra- and inter-generational transfers. That figure represents 1.4% of the UAE's total private wealth. This includes wealth moving between: Spouses, such as from a widow or widower to their partner. Generations, especially from older family members to children or grandchildren. Globally, the report expects over $83 trillion to change hands in the next two to three decades, most significantly in the: United States: over $29 trillion Brazil: nearly $9 trillion Mainland China: more than $5 trillion Wealth Rankings: Where the UAE Stands Globally and Regionally Regionally, the UAE ranks second in the Middle East for millionaire population: Saudi Arabia: ~340,000 millionaires UAE: 240,343 Israel: 186,000 Globally, Switzerland maintained its position as the wealthiest nation by average adult wealth: Switzerland: $687,166 United States: $620,654 Hong Kong: $601,195 Luxembourg: $566,735 Australia: $516,640 By contrast, while the UAE's average per adult ($147,663) trails these top-tier economies, its pace of wealth creation—and wealth attraction, signals an upward trajectory. Inflow of Wealth: Why Millionaires Are Moving to the UAE Not all of the 13,000 new millionaires in the UAE were homegrown. According to Knight Frank , citing Henley & Partners data, the UAE attracted 7,200 millionaires from abroad in 2024, a 53% increase from the previous year. This surge in financial migration brings the total number of resident HNWIs to 130,500, as reported earlier. Industry experts suggest that favorable tax policies, political stability, and high-end infrastructure continue to make the UAE a magnet for mobile global wealth. A Global Picture: Wealth Growth Tilted to the Americas While the UAE experienced notable domestic gains, the global wealth landscape also saw overall expansion: Global private wealth rose by 4.6% in 2024, up from 4.2% in 2023. Most of the increase came from North America, where stable currencies and strong financial markets drove momentum. The Americas led with more than 11% of global wealth growth. In contrast, the Asia-Pacific and EMEA (Europe, Middle East, Africa) regions saw sluggish growth: below 3% and 0.5%, respectively.

India now home to over 85,000 millionaires, ranks 4th globally: Report
India now home to over 85,000 millionaires, ranks 4th globally: Report

India Today

time11-06-2025

  • India Today

India now home to over 85,000 millionaires, ranks 4th globally: Report

India has emerged as the fourth-largest hub of high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) globally, with 85,698 people now having a net worth of over US$10 million, according to the Knight Frank Global Wealth Report now trails only the United States, China, and Japan in terms of the number of wealthy individuals, accounting for 3.7% of the global HNWI report highlights India's strong economic growth, rise in entrepreneurial activity, and increasing access to capital as the key reasons behind the growing concentration of personal Knight Frank report highlights that India's digital infrastructure, especially the spread of smartphones and digital banking, has made wealth creation more accessible than in earlier report also points to a sharp increase in India's billionaire population, which rose by 12% over the past year. India now has 191 billionaires, up from 165 in includes 26 new billionaires added in a single year, a pace far quicker than the seven added in 2019. Indian billionaires now collectively hold around US$0.95 trillion, ahead of France, Germany, and the UK, though still behind the United States and individuals in India, like their global counterparts, continue to place a high value on real estate. Nearly 30% of billionaire wealth globally is held in real estate, and this trend is particularly strong in India, where property is seen as a symbol of status and stability. Indian HNWIs are also increasingly looking to invest in overseas markets such as Dubai, London, and to the report, India's population of high-net-worth individuals is projected to grow by 43% by 2028, reaching an estimated 122,119 individuals. This projected growth is one of the fastest among all major report also notes a rising appetite among Indian investors for equities and risk-based assets, setting them apart from more conservative investors in Europe or Japan.

Gurgaon Draws Global Eyes: NRIs Pump Rs 10 Cr+ Into Luxury Real Estate
Gurgaon Draws Global Eyes: NRIs Pump Rs 10 Cr+ Into Luxury Real Estate

News18

time10-06-2025

  • News18

Gurgaon Draws Global Eyes: NRIs Pump Rs 10 Cr+ Into Luxury Real Estate

NRI investments in Gurgaon's luxury real estate are surging, with deals over Rs 10 crore. Key drivers include long-term capital appreciation and projects like Dwarka Expressway. A fresh wave of NRI investments is flowing into Gurgaon's luxury real estate market, with many deals crossing the Rs 10 crore mark — and experts believe this is just the beginning. According to Aishwaraya Shri Kapoor, a Gurgaon-based luxury real estate consultant, in her LinkedIn Post, non-resident Indians (NRIs) are now focusing on long-term capital appreciation rather than rental yield. 'Local buyers are still busy comparing price per sq ft. But NRIs are betting big on Gurgaon's capital growth story," Kapoor told the X post. One of the major drivers is the stark price arbitrage between prime Indian and international locations. 'In DLF Phase 1, land is still available at Rs 4–5 lakh per square yard. That's a fraction of what you'd pay in Lutyens' Delhi at around Rs 20 lakh per square yard — or even global destinations like Palm Jumeirah, where prices touch Rs 1 lakh per sq ft," Kapoor explained. Recent data supports this rising trend. As per JLL's Q1 2025 report, NRI real estate inflows have jumped 27% in the last quarter alone. Meanwhile, a Knight Frank projection suggests India's ultra-high-net-worth individuals (UHNWIs) could more than double by 2033 — an audience that sees Gurgaon as a future capital magnet. Kapoor believes infrastructure projects like the Dwarka Expressway (UER-2) and the upcoming Global City are adding to Gurgaon's appeal. 'These are not just roads or commercial hubs — they're Gurgaon's version of London's Crossrail or the Docklands transformation," she said. She added that Rs 10 crore may seem like a large investment today, but in 3–5 years, these could be considered 'steals" in hindsight. 'The capital gravity in India is shifting," Kapoor said. 'And Gurgaon is where it's landing first." Gurgaon is not just India's next real estate hotspot — it is on track to become its version of London by 2045, said Aishwaraya Shri Kapoor in her previous post. Kapoor calls 2035 to 2045 the 'Londonization Decade" for Gurgaon — a period during which the city is likely to witness explosive growth in infrastructure, capital inflows, and luxury housing demand. She points to significant land value gaps as a core driver. 'While Lutyens Delhi trades at around Rs 20 lakh per sq yard, DLF Phase 1 is still at Rs 4–5 lakh. Ultra-luxury property in Gurgaon is priced at Rs 25–35K per sq ft, compared to Rs 1 lakh+ in Mumbai or Dubai's Palm Jumeirah," she noted, citing data from Knight Frank and recent 2025 market averages. Kapoor draws historical parallels with Dubai and London's capital evolution. 'Mumbai followed Dubai between 2008–2018. Dubai mirrored London from 2000–2020. Gurgaon is now following the same early-stage blueprint," she said. About the Author Business Desk First Published: June 10, 2025, 08:15 IST

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store