Prince William is renting out an old chapel on a renovated estate that was once meant to be his and Kate’s ‘love nest.’
It is available for £795 a month or £9,540 a year.
The beautiful building has 1,200 square feet of studio or office space, stained glass windows, a cloakroom and kitchenette.
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St Denis’s Chapel, in Harewood End, near Hereford Herefordshire, is part of the Prince of Wales’s Duchy of Cornwall estate.
It was established by Edward III in 1337 to provide an income for the heir to the throne.
William was at university when his father bought the rambling country estate in Herefordshire, as reported by Luxury Property News.
And when the future King Charles applied for planning permission to rebuild a mansion to replace the one demolished by the SAS in the 1950s, it was claimed he was creating a new Highgrove for William.
It was believed he desired a future family home for his son that would be within driving distance of his own Highgrove House estate in the Cotswolds, where William grew up.
It was suggested Wills would live there with Kate before they had a family.
But William, Kate and their three children have ended up in Windsor while still retaining their first home, Amner Hall, in Norfolk.
The chapel up for rent is part of a comprehensive regeneration project of Harewood Park which Prince William inherited as part of the £1 billion Duchy of Cornwall estate when his father became King.
Agents said the stunning building has been finished to a very high standard and both the stonework and stained-glass windows have been carefully restored.
“The light and spacious interior is a truly unique workspace,” the agents said.
The chapel has a wood pellet boiler, mains water and electricity.
Drainage is by a reed bed system.
For over 50 years, the Duchy of Cornwall belonged to Charles but William inherited the Duchy when his grandmother, Queen Elizabeth ll, died and his father ascended the throne, making him next in the line of succession.
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