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Monday, 6 June 2011

* YOU BEEN SNAP * A Kensington Palace 'starter home' for Wills and his bride where the Prince once lived with his mother Diana"

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The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are to move into a new royal ‘starter home’ at Kensington Palace later this month.
The couple have chosen to embark on married life in a ‘modest’ apartment in the historic royal residence where William and Harry once lived with their late mother, the Daily Mail can reveal.
Although the newlyweds’ home boasts one of the most exclusive postcodes in the country, it is by all accounts a fraction of the size of the five-bedroom, five-reception room suite already occupied by their new neighbours, Prince and Princess Michael of Kent.
New homes: Kate and William, pictured on Saturday at the Epsom Derby, will move into a modest suite in Kensington Palace
New homes: Kate and William, pictured on Saturday at the Epsom Derby, will move into a modest suite in Kensington Palace "
When the couple got the builders in to add a few basic mod-cons, they discovered that the apartment in the 17th century palace was riddled with asbestos and had wiring so ancient that it was considered too dangerous to inhabit.

Until now William and Kate have been living in the Clarence House apartment that the prince shares with his younger brother, Prince Harry, when in London.
Although the three get on brilliantly the arrangement was not ideal for the couple. On one occasion Kate opened the door to Harry’s bedroom and found his close friend, Astrid Harbord, passed out on his bed after a particularly raucous night out.
Initially, however, there was not an obvious place for the couple to move into.
Lavish: The newlyweds will embark on married life in the historic royal residence where William and Harry spent much of their childhood
Lavish: The newlyweds will embark on married life in the historic royal residence where William and Harry spent much of their childhood"
For although the Queen and her family own several London residences, space is at a premium as most of the buildings are fully occupied by either royals or staff.
Apartment 8-9 at Kensington Palace, which was provided as a home for Diana, Princess of Wales, and her sons following her divorce from Prince Charles, has since been turned into offices for her ex-husband at a cost of £500,000.
Other members of the family have already secured the palace’s best rooms including the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester, the Duke and Duchess of Kent and, most notoriously, Prince and Princess Michael of Kent, who until 2002 had been paying only a ‘peppercorn rent’, rumoured to be around £69 a week, for their lavish apartment.
Top suite: Prince and Princess Michael of Kent at the palace
Top suite: Prince and Princess Michael of Kent at the palace"
Following a public outcry and uncomfortable questions in Parliament, the Queen agreed to subsidise her cousin and his wife – to the tune of £10,000-a-month – for six years.
Since 2009, however, they have been forced to find the full commercial rent of £120,000 a year themselves.
The suite that has been found for William and Kate has not been lived in by a senior royal in living memory and was most recently used by members of staff.
Temporary residence: The couple have been sharing an apartment in Clarence House with Harry
Temporary residence: The couple have been sharing an apartment in Clarence House with Harry"
As second in line to the throne, William will not be liable to pay rent – which will surely come as a relief to the prince, who is on an RAF salary of £37,170 a year.
The Mail has been told that a ‘minimal’ programme of refurbishment has been undertaken in recent weeks to make it more comfortable but that original fixtures, such as in the kitchen, have not been changed.
It is not yet clear how much this works programme will cost the public purse, but sources insisted it was ‘modest’.
The money will come out of the £14.5million annual subsidy the Queen receives from the Government to cover the upkeep of royal residences.
It is understood the couple only plan to live in the apartment for the first couple of years of married life as it is too small and not practical for family life.
They will continue to use their rented farmhouse on the island of Anglesey, close to William’s RAF base, as their main home but stay at Kensington Palace – or KP as it is known by its residents – when in London.
A spokesman for the prince’s office at St James’s Palace said: ‘They will move in at some point in June or July. A number of options for longer term solutions are still being considered.’

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