Ramsay Reveals £7.5M Mansion Makeover on Netflix

Ramsay Reveals £7.5M Mansion Makeover on Netflix

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has shared a glimpse of the vast renovations he's made to his £7.5 million mansion in London after months of planning rows.

The celebrity chef, 59, offers a look inside his lavish home in his new  docuseries, to show how he's transformed the property after beginning the works in 2022.

In clips from his six-part show, Gordon showed how he's turned the kitchen from dark green to a dark wood and sleek marble design.

He and Tana originally purchased the property in 2002 for £2.8 million. 

The Kitchen Nightmares star's kitchen also boasts floor-to-ceiling glass doors that lead out into the garden, which formed part of the big-money extension that was originally planned for the home.

The plans previously revealed that Gordon was set to demolish his whole ground floor to add an extension with a modern glass design, to house his open plan kitchen, living and dining room. 

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Gordon Ramsay has shared a glimpse of the vast renovations he's made to his £7.5 million mansion in London after months of planning rows

The chef has shared how he's transformed his family home after two years of renovations and planning rows (his family are pictured in the kitchen before the transformation) 

The living room, which featured in interviews with Gordon's family in the documentary, also featured vast bookcases and low-level lighting. 

Gordon and Tana were previously forced to vacate their home in 2022 while extensive renovations were made.

The couple share children Megan, 27, twins Holly and Jack, 26, and Tilly, 24, Oscar, six, and Jesse, two. 

Now worth £7million, the home has undergone a number of renovations over the years, including a single storey outbuilding in the garden and a temporary pig enclosure.

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Plans submitted to the council were approved in July 2021 and stated work would begin in September 2021 and end in December 2022. Yet the mammoth renovations - which included an extension and structural overhaul - rumbled on until 2024. 

During this time he was said to bein the new Battersea Power Station development costing about £12,000 a month.

As the family returned to the home in 2024, it had emerged that Gordon had also won a planning battle to build new security gates.

In documents lodged with the local council, Gordon asked for new timber ones instead of steel. 

Now worth £7million, the home has undergone a number of renovations over the years, including a single storey outbuilding in the garden and a temporary pig enclosure

The celebrity chef, 59, offers a look inside his lavish home in his new Netflix docuseries

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Gordon and Tana originally purchased the property in 2002 for £2.8 million, but have now added nearly £5 million to its value (pictured in their kitchen before the renovations)

Gordon showed off the work he'd done to the lower ground of his house in London in his six-part documentary

The Kitchen Nightmares star has changed the kitchen's green decor for dark wood and black and white marble walls

The plans previously revealed that Gordon was set to demolish his whole ground floor to add an extension with a modern glass design, to house his open plan kitchen and dining room

Much of the downstairs area appears in Gordon's show, after it was completely demolished and rebuilt to add more space and light

Gordon and Tana were previously forced to vacate their home in 2022 while extensive renovations were made

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During this time he was said to be staying at a luxury flat in the new Battersea Power Station development costing about £12,000 a month

Adam Peaty, who tied the knot with Gordon's daughter Holly in December, also featured in the show, as Gordon showed off the new living room in the house

The open-plan space offered much more light compared to the previous layout

In the renovations, the lower ground floor was also given a 'light well', which consists of a glass roof and it allows natural light to feed into the home (Jack pictured pre-renovations in 2019)  

Now worth £7million, the home has undergone a number of renovations, including a single storey outbuilding in the garden and a temporary pig enclosure (pictured 2017)

Other details include a glass balcony from the kitchen that overlooks and goes out onto the sprawling garden, which has an immaculate lawn (Oscar pictured in February) 

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As his Netflix series finally hit screens, Gordon was seen making his way to BBC Studios on Wednesday 

The chef was in high spirits as he continued to promote his series

Meanwhile, inside, the luxury pods include a fully functional kitchen, double bed, electric heating, a shower, storage, power points and a TV cable. They are made in Estonia before being shipped to the UK. 

Gordon is following a trend set by David Beckham and Guy Ritchie, who them placed at their country homes in Oxfordshire and Wiltshire.

The cabins known as the 'Model 4', are positioned facing each other at the bottom of the sizeable garden of the eight-bedroom Victorian home he shares with his Tana and their four older children Megan, 25, twins Jack and Holly, 23, Matilda, 21 and Oscar.

The local council gave the plans the go-ahead but advised Gordon that he had to arrange a meeting with arboriculturalists who will visit to inspect his trees.

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In 2022, Gordon sold one of his homes in Cornwall for £7.5m in what is believed to be the most expensive sale ever recorded in the county.

Daymer Bay House in Trebetherick, a property with six bedrooms, four bathrooms, a swimming pool and tennis court set on a hectare (2.5 acres) of land was sold in March last year. He paid £4.4m for the luxury seaside property in 2016.

The six-part docuseries follows Gordon, 57, open five culinary experiences in 22 Bishopsgate, a 278-metre building in central London, with a budget of £20million.

It also gives a sneak peek into his personal life with his wife Tana and their six children.

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