NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Mystery of Van Hoogstrate­n’s abandoned £40m mansion

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LONDON — It is a mansion bigger than Buckingham Palace built by a notorious slum landlord once dubbed Britain’s youngest millionair­e.

Yet photos show the £40 million mansion in East Sussex lying empty and unfinished 35 years after work began.

Hamilton Palace, near Uckfield, was constructe­d to house property tycoon Nicholas Van Hoogstrate­n’s art collection and to be his own mausoleum.

However, he has fired a succession of architects and quantity surveyors and fell out with his builders.

To the anger of the local community, work on the mansion was halted in 2001.

Van Hoogstrate­n (75), who was once on first-name terms with the late former President Robert Mugabe and lives most of the time in Zimbabwe, made huge sums of money as a slum landlord and his fortune was once estimated at £500 million.

In an interview earlier this year, he said: “I own nearly everything around here (in Sussex) and by own it, I mean own it — there is no mortgage on anything. It is one of the reasons why nobody can tell me what to do. I don’t have to be nice to anybody.”

Local residents complained it was a disgrace Hamilton Palace was being left to rot.

One fumed: “With all the housing problems, we have in this country surely the building can be put to good use. It is a disgrace that it is just going to ruin.”

In response, the property tystraten coon shot back: “Hamilton Palace is far from ‘crumbling’ and was built to last for at least 2 000 years. The scaffoldin­g only remains as a part of ongoing routine maintenanc­e such a property would require until completion.”

Responding to suggestion­s that the house — now dubbed the “ghost house of Sussex” — should be used for the homeless, he added: “The ‘homeless’ — the majority of whom are so by their own volition or sheer laziness — are one of the filthiest burdens on the public purse today. The chance of my offering an opportunit­y for them to occupy Hamilton Palace is just ludicrous.

“Likewise, my offering accommodat­ion to these Muslim ‘migrants’ and to encourage their besiegemen­t of our country and the unwarrante­d plundering of its resources is ridiculous. We should remove them all.”

Twice-married Van Hoogstrate­n — who has changed his name to Nicholas Adolf von Hessen — handed over many of his United Kingdom businesses to his children in 2002 after he was jailed for hiring a hitman to kill former business partner Mohammed Sabir Raja.

He was released on appeal and cleared at retrial.

However, in 2005 a High Court civil judge ruled that van Hoogwas responsibl­e for recruiting the hitman after Raja’s family sued him for £6 million.

That was not his first brush with the law. At the age of 22, he was jailed for four years for ordering a grenade attack on a rabbi whose son allegedly owed him cash.

Hamilton Palace is now owned by a holding company with four of his adult children as directors. His youngest child is 11.

Van Hoogstrate­n, who once admitted removing tenants by setting German shepherd dogs on them, was cleared of abusive behaviour in March this year after he called a police officer a “poofter”.

 ??  ?? Nicholas Van Hoogstrate­n (inset)’s £40 million mansion in East Sussex which is lying empty and unfinished 35 years after work began
Nicholas Van Hoogstrate­n (inset)’s £40 million mansion in East Sussex which is lying empty and unfinished 35 years after work began

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