Author reveals James Bond’s London address
You only live nice: Author reveals James Bond’s London address – a Grade II-listed £5.2million property in one of Chelsea’s most desirable squares
- William Boyd authored the James Bond continuation novel Solo, published 2013
- He claims to have located where Ian Fleming placed the spy’s London home
- Impressive property is a £5.2million terrace on Wellington Square in Chelsea
By Faith Ridler For Mailonline
Published: 05:13 EDT, 16 July 2020 | Updated: 06:10 EDT, 16 July 2020
An author claims to have located the London home where creator Ian Fleming placed James Bond – a £5.2million terrace in one of Chelsea’s most desirable streets.
William Boyd, who wrote the Bond continuation novel Solo, believes the author imagined his character lived in a Grade-II listed property on the stunning Wellington Square.
He pinpointed the location of fictional spy Bond’s home while researching for his novel, which was published in 2013, the Times reported.
Mr Boyd re-read all Fleming’s stories and found vital clues about its sought-after location and interior in Moonraker, Thunderball and From Russia with Love.
William Boyd, who wrote the Bond continuation novel Solo, believes creator Ian Fleming imagined James Bond lived on the stunning Wellington Square, Chelsea (pictured)
Mr Boyd claims he pinpointed the location of Bond’s home while researching for Solo, which was published in 2013. Pictured: Sean Connery as Bond in From Russia With Love
Bond’s creator refers to his home as a ‘comfortable flat in a Plane-tree’d square off the King’s Road’ in Moonraker, Mr Boyd says, before he ‘let slip a crucial co-ordinate’ in Thunderball.
In the 1961 novel, the ninth in the series, Fleming describes Bond driving out of the square into King’s Road and then ‘fast up Sloane Street and into the [Hyde] Park.’
This led Mr Boyd to conclude Wellington Square was where Fleming imagined 007’s home, an opinion shared by John Pearson in a biography of Bond written in 1973. Here, the exact house number was identified as 30.
However, Mr Boyd believes it is more likely to have been No 25. The home had belonged to The Sunday Times literary critic Desmond MacCarthy when Fleming worked at the newspaper as foreign manager.
Bond’s creator refers to his home as a ‘comfortable flat in a Plane-tree’d square off the King’s Road’ within Moonraker
Pictured: One of three sitting rooms inside the home believed to be the setting of Bond’s home
The terrace has five bedrooms, two bathrooms and three reception rooms, one of which was described as a ‘long, big-windowed sitting room’ in From Russia with Love
The terrace has five bedrooms, two bathrooms and three reception rooms, one of which was described as a ‘long, big-windowed sitting room’ in From Russia with Love.
MacCarthy and his wife Molly were ‘legendary entertainers,’ says Mr Boyd, and it is ‘highly probable that Fleming went to one or more of the MacCarthys’ parties.’
‘The circumstantial evidence is compelling,’ Mr Boyd added.
The home in Wellington Square was owned by the MacCarthy family until May last year, when it was sold to Frank Cordes and architect Iride Rosa.
Clues led Mr Boyd (pictured) to conclude Wellington Square was where Fleming imagined 007’s home
The home has five bedrooms set across four floors in the stunning, Grade-II listed property
Bond’s home is nestled on a road where houses sell for as much as £10 million, with an idyllic shared garden featuring a fountain standing at the centre
The couple told the Times they were interested in the house because of Mr MacCarthy’s connection with the Bloomsbury Group.
‘I am a huge James Bond fan,’ said Mr Cordes, of Boston Consulting Group. ‘I thought this might be my ticket to an Aston Martin but it is the mortgage that will probably stand between me and that car.’
The impressive property happens to be close to where British author John le Carré placed fictional spy George Smiley on Bywater Street.
Bond’s home is nestled on a road where houses sell for as much as £10 million, with an idyllic shared garden featuring a fountain standing at the centre.
Pictured: Frank Cordes, of Boston Consulting Group, and architect Iride Rosa who own the property linked to Bond