What better way to get in the Christmas spirit this year then to kick December off with Vlogmas🎄🎅🏻 This year you can look forward to a new tour every single day leading up to CHRISTMAS! We have some of the best homes of the year lined up. We hope you enjoy the tour of this Beautiful apartment in the heart of festive Covent Garden 🎄❄️
yea if i were an investor i'd wait until the price drops and then swoop in. Beautiful apartment and lovely location but i'm not paying that much for so little space
@@joelmontague5004 This apartment has been on the market for a long time at that price and still not sold. So I guess most people who commented on here are right - it's very overpriced!
The sad reality is this will probably sell at full price or near full price. It’s the prefect investment property for a luxury Air BnB, where it would rent to rich foreigners for 10’s of 1000’s of pounds a week based purely on the location.
@@anthonybariek997 I don't think it will, it's been on the market for a very very long time. Plus London has a 90 day limit on AirBnB so it won't work that way.
If it's not a repro. When you mention "after the war," you should indicate after WW1 or after the "Great War." "After the war" tends to indicate post WW2. It's very masculine, as many of these places seem to be. Nowhere for a dog to be happy. It's over 5 mil for a hotel suite for 2 people. And if there is one thing that is naff, it's buying art and books, for their (outer) decorative colour.
Carl Miele was a German businessman. He was a company co-founder of the German company Miele. Which is why I asked my friends from Germany how they pronounce the surname Miele. And I was surprised I was correct the whole time. It's 'Mee-Luh' (Sounding like Wheeler, Dealer, Sealer etc.)
This apartment is gorgeous and I'd love to live there, but there's no way this should be worth £5.25 MILLON. This feels more like it should be worth £2-2.5 million, but nevertheless location is most important with these properties. Another grand tour, and really appreciating the floorplans. ❤️
completely agree. I love the apartment and the location (Covent Garden is one of my favorite neighborhoods in London) but 5.25 million for 2 bedrooms isa rip off. For that price it should have at least another bedroom or 2
The interior of that place is hideous. Who ever designed it needs to look for another job. The our side is gorgeous. If I was in the market for a place like that I would knock of at least £1,5 million because it would cost that to redecorate and get rid of at that tackiness
This is too cramped and noisy for my family of 6 . If I owned the entire block, then, perhaps, I could insulate myself from the noise. I don't want neighbors too close to me. Typically; A- I would want the Coombe Park in Oxfordshire 1- It is just a few minutes from the top schools in Berkshire, the university at Oxford, and about an hour from the financial district in London. 2- It has miles of frontage on the Thames for me and my kids to boat and row, etc. 3- It has 125 acres for my children to ride, swim, play soccer and cricket, explore the countryside, and for me to also do the same and go for long-strolls and rides and entertain guests in the lawns. 4- It also has multiple indoor areas for recreational activities and social gatherings. 5- Since it would be quite costly to maintain, I'd have to run it as a country club, a boutique hotel, a private school, or a venue for sports, restaurants and cafes, etc., provided the drive or ride isn't too tiring. B- The 8th-Story Penthouse Atop the Parliament View Apartments in London: 1- It has exceptional views of and access to the Thames, Westminster, all of London, all parks and nightspots, and even to a marina, both on foot and via the metro or a car. 2- It has a nice terrace. 3- It is somewhat insulated from the noise of the other apartments and even that of the city----neither obnoxiously noisy, nor eerily quiet. 4- It has around 6,000 square-feet of covered area for multiple living, entertainment and social venues for my children. 5- It has towering ceilings and wide-open spaces with excellent views. 5- It doesn't have much in terms of an outdoor recreational area, but the parks are not too far. I might still prefer the home near Royston to it because of the outdoor area.
@@charliedock2621 I don't know and don't really care much about the heating. It's the proximity to Cambridge, the multiple outdoor and indoor recreational and social venues, the large open spaces, the layout and the views that I like. Energy can be supplied from the grid or solar or wind sources, and the heating can be geothermal, via heat-pump that transfers heat between the home and the earth underneath, or it can from a boiler , again, via a heat-pump or a direct supply, or direct electrical resistance or gas fire via conduction or convection; doesn't really matter. The place is well-insulated.
Nice view, but, it doesn't justify the 5.25mill premium. It is a bigger than average space, probably get snapped up by an overseas buyer at below asking...
5:58 *Miele* is pronounced as *Mee-la* in German! 6:28 You can actually sit hear and 🌧️😢 Hahahahahahahahahahh😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 Modern houses We gonna put marble and mirrors/glass in every possible surface making it glossy and then we gonna price it a few millions… No taste at all… a cold flat with marble and glossy-mirrored surfaces…
Ooh, the floor plan is smaller than the average apartments in Copenhagen? Okay. Yes, some places in the world don't have much living space. But this is quite doable. Who says Copenhagen has small apartments?
1- How much space does one need? Well, it should be adequate for each, individual, venue. I wouldn't want to hit my toes into the furniture or brush my shoulders or arms against the walls. I shouldn't have to walk sideways to get around the house, crouch or bend to avoid low ceilings, or walk a tight-rope to avoid hitting my toes. It's plain common sense. 2- I have a family of 6, so I wouldn't want all of us to collapse into a heap. I would want each one of us to have our separate bedrooms. 3- I shouldn't have to go out to stretch my arms or change clothes because I'd be knocking objects or hurting myself if I were to take the luxury to stretch my arms to change a coat, jacket, sweater, cardigan, or shirt. 4- I should be able to place a desk or a couch in my bedroom if that is what I desire. 5- Aside from these, I would like to have multiple indoor and outdoor venues of recreation, so I'm not sentenced to the hell of having to watch TV all my damn life. LOL 6- My children shouldn't need to take a helicopter, a private jet, or yacht to go to school, a cafe, a restaurant, or meet their friends. They should be be able to walk, bicycle, or take a train or a bus. 7- I shouldn't have to use earplugs to sleep or be swamped with wild animals. You neither want a place that is obnoxiously noisy, nor one that is eerily quiet. I don't know, but I feel the 8th-floor penthouse on top of the Parliament View Apartments and the Beacon on top of the Corniche would address all of the indoor needs. I wonder if the Vanbrugh Castle in Greenwich, the Ockwell Manor next to Maidenhead, or Coombe Park in Oxfordshire would address both my indoor and outdoor needs. I could also demolish multiple smaller properties and incorporate those into one, grand, property. 8- So far, the property near Royston seems to be the best fit, despite its not every architecturally or aesthetically significant exterior.
nice apt, looks like a great location, but no way would I want to bring groceries home and walk the entire length of the apt, thru the living room to the kitchen.
As a German : Miele : "Mie" is pronounced like "Me". For the 2nd part of the name it's more difficult to find a good example in the English language. If you know a bit French, they have as male article "le" - it's pronounced with a short "e". It's not "lay" and not like in the alphabet "abcde..".
small quite cramped and really excessively priced. Worth no more that 1.5 million taking into considration the very constant noise level from the market area. One wonders because of this if its even possible toopen the windows ! A real draw back. Guess also there is no parking for obligatory 2 cars ? All in all there are far far better apartments in central London for this huge price
Well done, spend all your time talking about the furnishings, none of which will be there for any new owner. As this channel grows they really need to find some more professional presenters.
Don't want to be negative but could not help myself hehe... Am I the only one who sees this interior design as very cheesy and slightly tacky... Its giving very much bachelor vibes.. Everything is a bit tacky in terms of "artworks" It definitely gives out ... "spare" flat to spend a weekend a year vibes rather than a place to live in full time. I would have to redo nearly everything here, so I would not purchase. :D To each its own of course, sorry for negativity. But I'm surprised everyone loves it so much as I think its really not that.
Don’t wish to be rude but you’ve got to sharpen up your descriptions. We can see what you’re looking at so saying here’s a chair is a bit redundant. Also it would help to be more knowledgeable. Anything that’s not modern or old is not necessarily ‘Art Deco’. You can’t just throw that around all the time. And “two twin sinks” is a bit of a schoolboy error. You’re not the estate agent so you can be a bit more imaginative in your responses to what you see. That place is over 5 mill and you say it’s handily placed for commuters! Come on!
DEAR TOM & JAZ, GOD BLESS YOU MY FRIENDS. I AM VERY PROUD OF YOU AND VERY HAPPY FOR YOU. I HOPE ALL OF YOUR DREAMS COME TRUE. I LOVE YOU. I HOPE YOU HAVE THE BEST AND HAPPIEST HOLIDAY SEASON OF YOUR ENTIRE LIFE. 🙏 SINCERELY PETER
Air extractor for induction hob . The one thing i don’t like in this beautiful apartment is the air extractor . Use a much more subtle one that is very neatly inside the workings of the hob .
I like the Coombe Park because it has an outdoor area of 125 acres and an indoor area of tens of thousands of square feet for my children to ride, swim, explore and to play soccer, cricket, billiards, etc. The area is also sufficient for me to ride, go for strolls and entertain at multiple outdoor and indoor venues. It also has a large frontage on the Thames, for me and my children to boat, row, and even navigate along the river. It's only a few minutes from schools in Berkshire and the university in Oxford and under an hour from the financial district and night spots in London. If I can run it as a country club, a a boutique hotel, a recreational venue comprising of cafes and outdoor activities, or a school, then it should generate sufficient profits to pay for the staff required to keep it neat and clean. The only large property inside of London is the Vanbrugh Castle in Greenwich, provided I can convince all the owners to sell all 3 acres to me. I wonder if there would be other such properties along the banks of Thames or multiple small properties(warehouses, factories, offices, or homes) that can be demolished and consolidated into a large home? I wonder if you'd have large properties with large outdoor and indoor areas for multiple recreational and social venues along the banks of Thames from Maidenhead to Twickenham, Richmond, Wandsworth, Little Venice, Vauxhall, Lambeth, Canary Wharf or Greenwich, etc.? From West to East along the banks of Thames, with access via train or metro-station and motorway to find luxurious properties that aren't too far and can either be modified or demolished and rebuilt and consolidated into one large property? Properties around Cambridge or those around Oxford or even those around Brighton, Southend-On-Sea, or Dartford should also be good if they have good schools, good neighborhoods, and quick connectivity via road or rail. I spent a lot of time in London in the late 80s and early 90s, when I was in my 20s, but mostly stayed in central London, so you'd have better knowledge of schools and neighborhoods, but generally the schools in London, those in Berkshire, and those around Cambridge and Oxford are pretty good. Cambridge might be a more vibrant city than Oxford because Oxford might be relying mostly on London for nightlife and services.
your commentary is normally really good but why do you have a habit of pointing to random things like a border in the floor and call it art deco? there was nothing art deco about any of that house hahaha
Sweetie learn the correct terms. Timber. is a live tree Log. is a tree that was cut down (feld) Lumber. log that was processed Framing. lumber used to build the structure Finish. wood used to ornament the home. Oak, Pine, Mahogany, Walnut, etc. example: beautifully grained oak was installed by craftsmen in the liabrary.
I absolutely *LOVE* the decor of that writer's space at 2:02 ! I especially enjoy writing horror so there is nothing better than the diabolical visage of an evil cackling old hag/witch leering down at me as I do so.
I've seen a lot of LH videos and love them. For the homes, this is one I would absolutely love to live in. ideal location for me, a touch of extravagance and not too large a property.
Wonderful apartment but too small for that price even in the location I think. I have a Miele Washer/Dryer machine and Vacuum Clearer best make ever in my opinion.
Is there a lift a great flat if you do a lot of travelling I need to leave it for months on end shame there's no spa with this property the fittings are superb does it come with furniture kitchen looks a bit cold they tend to be agreed meeting place and hub of any property compared to what you would get for three times that price it's a great price if you've got the money
with the bubble likely to crash any month foreign investorswill not touh it for this crazy very optimistic price. It will soon go down vastly to a true realistic price