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Thursday 27 June 2013

Kate and William's home makeover costs taxpayer £1m: Couple and new baby to move in to Kensington Palace in the autumn

  • Government funding is being used to pay for building work 
  • Duke and Duchess of Cambridge paying for soft furnishings themselves
  • 57-room Apartment 1A used to be Princess Margaret's home
The cost to taxpayers of refurbishing the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s new Kensington Palace home has hit £1million so far, officials revealed today.

William and Kate are hoping to move into Apartment 1A, the 57-room residence once inhabited by Princess Margaret, with their new baby this autumn.

Although the couple are paying for fixtures and finishing – such as curtains and soft furnishings – themselves, the cost of basic building work, such as new heating, electrics and plastering, is being met by money given to the Queen by the government.

Decorating: The taxpayer has spent £1million refurbishing Kate and William's new Kensington Palace home

Home sweet home: Kensington Palace, where the royal couple have given their apartment a £1million makeover
So far the internal refurbishments have cost £600,000 and the renewal of the apartment’s roof a further £400,000.

A spokesman for the Duke and Duchess stressed that a close eye was being kept on costs but the work on the roof had been long overdue while the cost of the internal refurbishments have been dramatically increased due to the removal of asbestos.
According to the annual accounts released today the couple were also responsible for the single most expensive foreign visit out of any member of the royal family over the last 12 months.

The couple spent £370,590 on flights during their official Diamond Jubilee tour of Asia and the South Pacific last autumn.
That figure covers the flights taken by their entourage (although not the cost of their police protection officers) both in advance and during the tour itself.

Trip: At the weekend William, Kate and pet dog Lupo got a free ride back to London from a friend flying past their home in North Wales


Coming in to land: The Duchess of Cambridge can be seen through the helicopter window (right) as it touches down in Buckinghamshire

But the Queen’s Keeper of the Privy Purse, Sir Alan Reid, insisted that the monarchy still offers ‘incredibly good’ value for money, costing just 52.5p for every man, woman and child in the country during the year.

A Kensington Palace spokesman: 'This essential structural work needed to be completed whoever moved into the buildings at Kensington Palace.

'Large quantities of asbestos have had to be removed, as well as work on the heating and hot water systems and electrical wiring.

'The last major works in the apartment took place around the time that Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon moved in more than 50 years ago. The cost of interior decorating and furnishing of course falls to the Royal Family privately.'

It also emerged today that the Queen is to receive a five per cent pay rise in income next year, it emerged today.

It will take the monarch's income to almost £38million, the second year running that funding from the taxpayer has gone up.

The extra money comes after the Crown Estate posted record profits, of which the Queen gets a share.
Pay rise: The Queen, pictured yesterday with the Grenadier in the gardens of Buckingham Palace, is to receive a five per cent rise in income

Overall the cost to the taxpayer of supporting the monarchy rose by just under £1 million to £33.3 million during the Diamond Jubilee year, Buckingham Palace accounts showed today.

The Queen’s official expenditure increased by £900,000 from £32.4 million during the 2011-12 financial year to £33.3 million in 2012-13, according to the royal public finances annual report.

The taxpayer funds used to pay for official air and rail travel at home and abroad for members of the Royal Family fell by £500,000 from £5 million in 2011-12 to £4.5 million in 2012-13.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s Diamond Jubilee tour of south east Asia and the South Pacific was the most expensive foreign tour, costing almost £370,000 when the cost of a reconnaissance trip by members of their household was included.

There was also an increase in spending on property maintenance - money used for the upkeep of royal residences and other buildings - from £8.9 million to £9.1 million.

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