Archive for the ‘Entertaining at home’ Category

Where Robbie did entertain, at home

Monday, April 11th, 2011

The lavish interior and unusual layout of 120 Kensington Park Road would make it an iconic Notting Hill home even if Robbie hadn’t lived there between 1998 and 2002 after he’d left Take That and moved down to London from Manchester.

It must have seen some life whilst he was there, especially as this was during his ‘wild’ times. He was dating Nicole Appleton, singer with All Saints, whom he got engaged to but was unceremoniously dumped outside the address when they broke up.

Robbie also let Geri Halliwell move into to his home after the Spice Girls split up so she could get away from the paparazzi. But it probably wasn’t the best place for privacy, as it’s over the Paul Smith shop on the corner of Westbourne Grove and right in the heart of Notting Hill with all the shops, restaurants and antique shops just around the corner.

Picture of Robbie Williams

The house is on four floors with a great little sun trap of a roof terrace designed by the vendor’s brother – landscape gardener, Caspar Gabb, a gold award winner of the Chelsea Flower Show in 2006. The current owner completely revamped the property when he bought it four years ago, putting the living room on the top floor and opening it up to the rafters and turning one of the bedrooms into the kitchen.

rooftop of Robbie Wiliams' old home in Notting Hill

Now the V-shaped 30 foot long living room has a vaulted ceiling with sky lights and a pale wooden floor. At one end is a section of solid wood with a very real looking contemporary fireplace at the bottom, breaking up the otherwise large expanse of white walls. There are stunning views from this floor and the terrace, with its teak decking and bench, over the roofscape of London and also the very pretty Kensington Park Gardens.

the large lounge of Robbie Williams' old home in Notting HIll

On the second floor is a large kitchen with central work station and dining area. Stretching above this into the reception room above is a curved double height gallery. This feature really makes a difference to both rooms with a glass balustrade set around the top and a stunning light installation hanging down, created by Irish designer, Niamh Barry. There’s also a small bedroom and smart little bathroom with dark grey granite tiling on the second floor.

On the floor below are two en-suite bedrooms, one of which is the master bedroom with large bathroom tiled in marble and a large walk-in shower. The bedroom is very light with four sash windows including the curved corner one and has plenty of fitted wooden wardrobes.

the dining room of Robbie Williams' old home in Notting Hill

Throughout, the property is very high tech – with Lutron lighting, a Bose integrated music system so you can listen to different music on each floor and pop-up TVs in the living room and at the end of the bed in the master bedroom. The 2,040 square feet property has its own entrance and is for sale through Domus Nova for £3.45 million.

Last-minute Christmas strategies for procrastinators

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

Christmas dinner
Dilemma: You don’t know how to stuff a turkey, or you just don’t want to. You’re not interested in making yorkies from scratch or hunting down the right wines to match each course. And yet, at an earlier, more innocent age (probably around October), you stupidly made the grand gesture of declaring that YOU would host Christmas day this year. And now you will have people at your place next week, expecting to be fed something spectacular.

Surely not since The Last Supper has any one meal ever caused this much anguish and gnashing of teeth. Good grief, why don’t we all just give it up and order in. Jamie Oliver’s doing it, so there’s no need to feel guilty.

If you’re in London, take a leaf out of Jamie’s book and order Christmas in a Box from the celebrities’ favourite deli, Melrose & Morgan, in Primrose Hill for £39.95 per head and be kitted out with turkey or goose, wine, cheese, pudding, organic sausage meat and all the trimmings.

If you’re not in London, take a look at The Christmas Dinner Company. They’ll deliver a brilliant pack with everything you need (including a roasting pan) by 23 December.

Decorating
Dilemma: It’s two days until Christmas and you still haven’t decked the halls. Don’t feel bad. You’re probably very busy and important, and understandably, tinsel and fairy lights don’t feature all that high on your life agenda.

Of course, when you finally get the chance to drop into M&S, all the good stuff is gone and you’re left with 80cm of garish multicoloured lights, a box of plastic baubles (half of which are already broken) and some semi-squashed chocolate ornaments.

Never mind. You have two options.

Option One: Embrace whatever tacky delights are left over at your local pound shop and give your Christmas an ironic theme of eye-watering garishness. You’ll need loads of poor quality tinsel in as many different colours as you can find, plus the aforementioned broken baubles and multicoloured lights, and on top of those just throw on anything you’ve ever worn to a hen’s night (feather boas, plastic tiaras, etc). You’ll also need the ability to carry this off with a laugh and a carefree hair-toss as you hand each guest a glass of cava in a plastic cup and trill, “Yes, I thought we’d go a bit ‘Katie & Peter: The Next Chapter’ this year…”

Option Two: Embrace your inner domestic god/goddess and declare this year to be a homemade affair. You’ll need a recipe for stained glass window biscuits (to hang as tree ornaments), some string, a needle, cranberries and popcorn (for a homemade tree garland), and some potted poinsettias from your local florist to dot around the place. Prepare to feel Nigella-like levels of smugness.

Shopping
Dilemma: It’s 22 December. You’ve left your Christmas shopping until the very last minute. Again. And after an office Christmas party, a disastrous ice-skating adventure, and a three-hour performance of The Nutcracker (during which you fell asleep) all in one week, the last thing you can face right now is a soul-crushing trip to the high street.

No problem. Make a list of the people you need to buy for, assign them to one of the following gift categories according to age, gender and how much you like them, and buy online at one of the listed websites (all of which offer same-day or next-day delivery, so you can have everything delivered to your door by 23 December).

Christmas cards
Dilemma: All the lovely Christmas cards from your friends and family are piling up. And so are the lovely Christmas cards to your friends and family. Over there. In a corner. Still unwritten.

Avoid writer’s cramp and a trip to the post office by sending everyone free holiday e-cards. It’s the (eleventh-hour) thought that counts.