Dubbed “London’s most expensive single house,” The Holme is a mansion — but it’s a legend that will last. Built in 1818 on John Nash’s visionary commissions by Decimus Burton, this 40-bedroom palace sits upon four acres of elegantly manicured glory in Regent’s Park, radiating historical significance and modern prestige.

Valued at over £139 million today, The Holme is a work of timeless elegance. With its sweeping colonnades, symmetrical facades, and lagoon views, it is a haven that few urban houses can rival. Inside, grandeur and warmth are poised — where hand-carved mouldings, silk-draped salons, and corridor-worthy masterpieces tantalise with the lexicon of classically tailored luxury.

Beyond its raw physical elegance, The Holme is also a sign of continuity — a connection between London’s aristocratic past and ultra-luxury present. To aficionados of property perfectionism, it is not just a house but living heritage, assiduously tended and deliberately cultivated.

In a city defined by tradition and novelty, The Holme is its most poetic expression — a palace for one who understands architecture as the ultimate luxury.