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The £140m flat: World-record price earns mystery buyer room service from a TV chef, a panic room and SAS-trained bodyguards

By Colin Fernandez

 It boasts a penthouse view over Central London, a private wine-tasting facility and an underground passage to a Heston Blumenthal restaurant.

Throw in security measures a James Bond villain would be proud of and a ‘panic room’ in case things go wrong, and you would expect to pay a high price.

But even estate agents could not contain their amazement yesterday as a London property was on the verge of being sold for £140million – making it the most expensive flat in the world.

 World record: The luxurious interior of an apartment at Christian and Nick Candy's Knightsbridge development

 High life: An artist's impression of the interior of one of the penthouse apartments at One Hyde Park

Costing more than £6,000 per square foot, the two-floor apartment in the One Hyde Park, Knightsbridge block has floor-to-ceiling windows, its own car park and access to a host of spas and squash courts.

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There is also a tunnel to the neighbouring Mandarin Oriental Hotel – where TV chef Blumenthal will soon open his first London restaurant – to allow residents access to 24-hour room service, while the performance car-maker McLaren is opening a showroom on the ground floor.

And should the residents feel the need to venture outside, the local ‘corner shops’ include Harrods and Harvey Nichols.
 The London skyline from the penthouse at One Hyde Park and, below, another of the luxurious reception rooms

Naturally enough the residence has security features including bullet-proof windows, SAS-trained security guards, an air purifier to frustrate poison gas attacks and a ‘panic room’ where the owners can retreat in safety should they be targeted by kidnappers or robbers.

24-hour room service: House chef Heston Blumenthal

The previous most expensive flat was valued at £115million in a rival Central London development at St James’s Square in 2008.

Trevor Abrahamson of estate agent Glentree Estates said of the latest sale: ‘This is a huge price. In the last six months we have sold more trophy properties than we have in the last two years.

'One minute there was an over-supply and then there was a shortage. Prices are high.’

While the identity of the new owner is shrouded in secrecy, the usual super-rich suspects of Russian oligarchs and Arab billionaires are in the frame.

In all a quarter of buyers in the block are Middle Eastern, while one third are European.

Around 65 per cent of all the properties in the block – due to open later this year – have been sold. The average cost is, comparatively speaking, a mere trifle, at £20million.

The £140million price tag is seen as a sign that the top end of the property market has been untouched by the recession as the world’s financial elite continue to flock to London, taking advantage of the weakness of the pound.

One Hyde Park, seen here from Sloane Street, is one of the most expensive residential areas in the world

Business brothers: Nick (left) and Christian Candy bought the site for £150m in 2004 before developing it into luxury flats
 An aerial view of One Hyde Park, the four geometric buildings in the central foreground, with the Serpentine winding away behind it

The property, designed by architect Lord (Richard) Rogers’s firm, Rogers Stirk Harbour and Partners, is being marketed by developer brothers Christian and Nick Candy.

They bought the site, formerly occupied by a grim 1950s office block, for £150million in 2004.

Candy & Candy refused to comment on the sale of the flat, citing client confidentiality.

The Candys hit the headlines recently over their efforts to redevelop Chelsea Barracks after the Prince of Wales complained to their Qatari backers about the design.

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