Scottish Daily Mail

Tom Conti puts home he bought for £165k on market for £17.5m

Actor admits defeat in row with soccer star neighbour

- By Simon Cable

WITH its sprawling gardens and tranquil setting, his home once provided a rare oasis of calm among London’s busy streets.

But it appears Tom Conti has finally lost patience in his battle to halt the numerous buildi ng developmen­ts which he claims are blighting his leafy North London suburb.

The Scots actor, who was engaged in a long planning dispute with exfootball­er neighbour Thierry Henry, has now put his Hampstead mansion on the market for £17.5million – 30 years after he bought the fivebedroo­m property for £165,000.

The move comes seven years after he claimed he would never leave and insisted that buying the house was the best thing he had ever done.

The 6,649 sq ft home, set in gardens measuing more than half an acre, also has a games room, study and a library. According to the estate agents, a large roof terrace offers views as far as the Surrey Hills.

But the past decade has seen a string of high-profile planning battles between neighbours and the local council.

Paisley-born Conti was infuriated in 2012 after councillor­s gave the go-ahead for former Arsenal star Henry to demolish a neighbouri­ng property and replace it with a modern design that included a 40ft fish tank. Three years on, that property remains a noisy building site littered with constructi­on equipment.

Criticisin­g Camden Council’s decision to allow Henry’s developmen­t, the star said at the time: ‘There are a lot of retired people round here or people like me who work from home – I write – and it’s a terrible disturbanc­e. This used to be a wonderful place to live, but in the past ten years there’s been endless, endless building.’

Earlier this year Conti objected to plans submitted by City financier Caspar Berendsen to build a mega-basement under the nearby Grade II-listed 18th century home where John Galsworthy wrote The Forsyte Saga. The Shirley Valentine actor, 73, branded the scheme ‘ inhumane’, claiming i t would cause intolerabl­e disruption to the lives of long-suffering locals.

He also took on Tesco when he campaigned alongside Emma Thompson to prevent the supermarke­t chain opening a store in nearby Belsize Park. And he fought developers back in 2008 by taking part in a protest against a housing developmen­t in Kentish Town.

Conti bought his home, which was built in 1902, in 1985 when it was divided into flats.

He set about transformi­ng it into one of London’s finest private homes complete with a small ballroom, minstrels’ gallery and a cinema room.

Stars such as David Bowie have stayed at the house, while Conti and his wife, Kara Wilson, have hosted charity galas for up to 75 people at a time in the ballroom. The house has been put on the market with London Real Estate Advisors, with the estate agency describing it as ‘without doubt one of the most significan­t houses in London’.

It is being advertised with its own website and prestigiou­s online brochure, reserved for the most exclusive properties.

 ??  ?? Sound investment: The actor has installed a ballroom, minstrels’ gallery and cinema room in the house
Sound investment: The actor has installed a ballroom, minstrels’ gallery and cinema room in the house
 ??  ?? Imposing: A large reception room leads on to a conservato­ry
Imposing: A large reception room leads on to a conservato­ry
 ??  ?? Light and airy: A glass-topped table in the extensive kitchen
Light and airy: A glass-topped table in the extensive kitchen
 ??  ?? Wooden beams: An upstairs recreation room
Wooden beams: An upstairs recreation room
 ??  ?? Selling up: Conti and his wife Kara
Selling up: Conti and his wife Kara
 ??  ?? From the Mail, May 11, 2012 Conti cries foul as Thierry lines up 40ft f ish tank
From the Mail, May 11, 2012 Conti cries foul as Thierry lines up 40ft f ish tank

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