India’s steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal plans to build a £30-million mansion on the outskirts of London that designers claim will have a “zero-carbon” footprint once completed. Sixty-year-old Mittal, Britain’s richest man, wants to build a country home in the Surrey green belt that is self-sufficient in energy and harnesses outdoor temperature differences to create natural air-conditioning, The Sunday Times reported.
The unique modern design will not only ensure the house is zero-carbon, but will make the entire 340-acre estate carbon negative. The project is Mittal’s first country home. His main home is in Kensington Palace Gardens, west London, a house bought from Bernie Ecclestone, the Formula One mogul, for £57 million and decorated with marble from the same quarry that supplied the Taj Mahal.
Mittal declined to comment on the Surrey Hills project, but a statement issued on his behalf said: “Reinstatement of a substantial country mansion on a grand scale is considered to present the best means of securing the long-term future of Alderbrook Park as a single, well-managed and high-quality estate.”
Mittal bought the land via an offshore holding company, which disguised the identity of the purchaser. His name leaked out because correspondence between his wife, Usha, and the Royal Parks was included in the planning documents.
The house will be built on a stone plinth, which will provide various terraces on which to enjoy the cocktail hour. It will have at least 10 bedrooms, outdoor and indoor swimming pools, a fitness centre, an under-ground art gallery, tennis courts, sculpture garden, an arboretum and croquet lawn.
Mittals will grow enough wood on the 340-acre estate to feed giant biomass fuel boilers to provide heating and hot water. Estate workers will chop down 100 tonnes of wood a year for the boilers and plant trees to replace them. Solar panels on two huge roofs will turn sunlight into electricity.
Underneath each roof will be a courtyard, which will act as a “lung” for the surrounding rooms. In the summer, natural cool air from the estate’s wooded areas will be drawn into the courtyards by underground stainless steel tubes. In the winter, solar-heated air will be drawn down from the roofs.