Daily Mail

How ‘007’s HQ’ is getting a £1 BILLION MAKEOVER

It’s the historic building that hosted Churchill in WWII... and even James Bond on the big screen. But soon, the Old War Office on Whitehall will house a £1,000-a-night hotel and flats worth up to £200m...

- By Mark Palmer PROPERTY EDITOR

As GRAND designs go, nothing quite compares with the Old War Office on London’s Whitehall — not when it was built nearly 120 years ago and not during its ongoing £1 billion restoratio­n today.

Completed in 1906, using 26,000 tons of Portland stone, 3,000 tons of York stone, hundreds of thousands of Roman cube mosaics and more than 26 million bricks, this monumental constructi­on, spread over 770,000 square feet was built — within shouting distance of Downing street — to symbolise the might of the British Empire, and played a key role in both world wars.

With its Ionic columns, triumphal arches and flamboyant turrets, it was one of the last great architectu­ral masterpiec­es of the Edwardian age, shaped in the form of a trapezium, with its four frontages all a different size. More of a stately fortress than a government office building.

At its peak during World War I, more than 2,500 people worked there, including several hundred in specially erected huts on the roof, referred to as the ‘Zeppelin Terrace’ because of its vulnerabil­ity to German bombs.

There were 1,000 rooms and some 2.5 miles of corridors, where Boy scouts were employed as messengers. Over the years, the likes of Lord ‘Your Country Needs You’ Kitchener, H. H. Asquith, David Lloyd George and Winston Churchill stalked its corridors of power, often convening in the office of the Chief of the Imperial General staff to make decisions that would shape the future of the free world.

Never has the building been open to the public — although millions have seen it in James Bond movies over the years, not least in the closing scenes of skyfall when Bond, played by Daniel Craig, stands on the roof and looks wistfully towards Big Ben and Westminste­r Abbey before being handed a gift by Moneypenny from the late ‘M’.

But, next spring — at least that’s the plan — the doors of the Old War Office will swing open to reveal a building divided in two, with Raffles London, the first British hotel of the singapore-based Raffles group, occupying one half and the other half containing 85 apartments, including a five-bedroom penthouse which is expected to fetch as much as £200 million, making it the most expensive private flat in the country.

HOTEL rooms are expected to start at around £1,000 a night — but compliment­ary tours will be on offer ten days per year, in line with terms laid down by the Ministry of Defence when it sold the building in 2016 to the Anglo-Indian Hinduja Group on a 250-year lease for £350 million.

That sum could be described as loose change to the brothers, Gopichand and srichand Hinduja, who have amassed a fortune of more than £28 billion around the globe.

Even so, it’s quite an undertakin­g, as the Mail discovered on an exclusive hard-hat tour, joining more than 1,000 contractor­s working on the site in a race to finish the job on time.

The Bond connection is apt. Ian Fleming worked for the Naval Intelligen­ce service nearby and was a regular visitor to the building, while his older brother Peter had a desk in the Old War Office after he was recruited to investigat­e what was called ‘irregular warfare’.

In the 1983 film Octopussy, the building doubles as the MI6 headquarte­rs and, in addition to skyfall, it features in A View To A Kill, Licence To Kill and spectre.

Access to the apartments — some of which already have been sold — is off Whitehall Court at the rear of the building via the ‘ spies Entrance’, so named because MI6’s original headquarte­rs was across the road, disguised as the offices of a made-up company called Rasen, Falcon & Co.

A sense of intrigue still pervades the whole building. There’s even a private lift which was for the use only of secretarie­s of state, including John Profumo, who resigned over his fling with Christine Keeler, giving rise to speculatio­n about who else might have joined him in the clanking elevator.

Next door is Banqueting House, outside which Charles I was executed in 1649, and both Henry VIII and Oliver Cromwell died in Whitehall Palace, which occupied the site of what is today’s Old War Office until 1698, when one of William III’s servants hung some linen to dry by a charcoal fire and burnt the place down.

In 1897, amid calls for the armed forces to be answerable to the elected government, the land was purchased under an Act of Parliament and the scottish architect William Young won the commission to design a building in Edwardian baroque style, which, to coin a popular word of the time, would have ‘swagger’.

subsequent­ly, it’s been described by one historian as the ‘architectu­ral equivalent of a military parade or grand review of the fleet’.

William Young died before it was finished but his son, Clyde, took over, overseeing the installati­on of allegorica­l sculptures depicting the ‘Horror and Dignity of War’, ‘Victory and Fame’ and such like, along with the crest of Edward VII, whose Coronation took place during constructi­on.

Future hotel guests will enter from Whitehall (although VIPs will also be driven into the court) and step into the Grand Hall, where they’ll be greeted by the imposing Brescia marble staircase with richly veined alabaster balusters.

The staircase starts with a wide central flight, then turns left and right, before sweeping up again to form a bridge spanning the whole width of the structure. It’s a mightily impressive sight.

At the top of the first flight, an ornate, 19th-century French clock hangs on the wall — and it was here that leading members of the government used to address senior staff.

Indeed, it was after one particular

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Opulent: The grand staircase and how the Raffles hotel will look (below). Above, Roger Moore as Bond in Octopussy
Opulent: The grand staircase and how the Raffles hotel will look (below). Above, Roger Moore as Bond in Octopussy

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom