Scottish Daily Mail

Meghan’s secret plans for a cosy Windsor cottage

(And taxpayers could foot the bill)

- By Vanessa Allen

WE may be footing the bill, but the public have been kept in the dark about the details of a multi-millionpou­nd refit to Prince Harry and Meghan’s new home. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are to move into Frogmore Cottage, in the grounds of the Windsor Estate, after it was given to them by the Queen.

The couple, who are expecting their first child in April, are likely to arrive from Kensington Palace in the spring. The 19th century cottage has been used as rented accommodat­ion for members of the royal staff and had fallen into disrepair.

Now a planning applicatio­n for the Grade II-listed building has been lodged with the council ahead of the move by Harry, 34, and Meghan, 37. But security concerns mean the plans have been kept private.

A ‘special note’ on the applicatio­n states it contains ‘sensitive informatio­n’ and that the usual plans, architect’s drawings and other documents have not been made public.

Similar levels of secrecy surrounded plans for renovation­s at Anmer Hall in Norfolk before the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge moved into the Georgian manor on Sandringha­m Estate.

Harry and Meghan held their wedding reception at Frogmore House, which overlooks the twostorey, stucco-faced cottage, and their engagement pictures were taken in the grounds.

It is understood that Harry and Meghan hope to turn Frogmore Cottage into a five-bedroom family home, with space for a nursery and a live-in nanny. They currently live in two-bedroom Nottingham Cottage at Kensington Palace.

A Kensington Palace spokesman said the costs of any substantia­l building work would be covered by the Sovereign Grant, which is ultimately funded by the taxpayer.

Decorative work inside the cottage is expected to be paid for by Harry and Meghan, whose wedding cost the public purse £3.4million.

Frogmore is currently divided into five flats, meaning there would be space for separate accommodat­ion for Meghan’s mother Doria Ragland.

The 62-year-old former social worker is expected to be a ‘hands-on’ grandmothe­r, and to stay with the Sussexes on a regular basis.

Frogmore is also less than half a mile from Windsor Cashis

‘Sensitive informatio­n’

tle, meaning the new baby’s great-grandmothe­r the Queen would be close at hand.

officials from the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead have already approved a planning applicatio­n to refit the cottage and install two ‘orangery’ extensions. The plans, approved in July, also included permission for a bedroom to be built above a studio in the grounds of the cottage, meaning it could be used as a luxury ‘granny flat’.

A further planning applicatio­n was submitted in october after it was announced that the duchess was pregnant, and it has yet to be approved.

The applicatio­n seeks the council’s permission for internal and external works at the cottage, and ‘landscapin­g’ in its grounds but no further details have been made public.

A note on the file states: ‘The the applicatio­n contains sensitive informatio­n and therefore the public register is not accompanie­d by any forms, drawings or supporting documents. The applicatio­n will be advertised in the usual way but there is no additional informatio­n that is disclosabl­e.’

A planning officer who approved the first applicatio­n noted that parts of the fiveunit cottage and the studio had fallen into disrepair.

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