Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Politics
Lizzy Buchan

Inside Rishi Sunak's No10 flat - opulent curtains replace George Osborne's 'tired' decor

Rishi Sunak and his wife have ditched George Osborne's "very tired" furnishings in favour of opulent curtains and jewel coloured sofas for their Downing Street flat.

The couple have chosen to use the No10 flat where they lived when Mr Sunak was Chancellor, rather than moving to the larger flat above No11 which has been used by prime ministers since 1997.

But Mr Sunak, his heiress wife Akshata Murty and their daughters Krishna, 11, and Anoushka, 9, will be living in “far less glitz” than Boris Johnson 's family as they seek to move Downing Street on from the “court of Carrie” era, according to a profile in society bible Tatler.

The Sunaks funded the remodelling themselves, in contrast to the row over Mr Johnson's attempts to get a Tory donor to pay for a lavish revamp of his home.

The couple were joint 222nd on the Sunday Times Rich List of the UK's wealthiest people, with an estimated personal fortune of £730million.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and wife Akshata Murty, return to No 10 after visiting a food and drinks market (PA)

Ms Murty is the daughter of tech billionaire NR Naranya Murty, founder of Infosys and one of India's richest men.

She was at the heart of a political storm earlier this year when it emerged she held "non-dom" status, meaning she didn't have to pay UK tax on overseas income.

Following the backlash, she said she would pay UK tax on all her foreign income effective immediately and backdated to the last tax year.

The Sunaks own four properties, including a mews house in upmarket Kensington, in West London, a Grade II listed mansion in the PM's North Yorkshire constituency and an apartment in Santa Monica, California.

John Challis, an upholsterer from the PM's Richmond constituency who worked on the Downing Street refurbishment, told Tatler how the flat was remodelled to update tired decor left behind by Tory Chancellor George Osborne.

“We made long, fully interlined curtains for all five windows overlooking the garden, hand-pleated and held back with heavy coordinating tassels in red, gold and the ivory of the damask,” he said.

“The ornate cornicing was hand-gilded and a rug was commissioned to almost fill the room.

"Akshata was very involved and keen to see how things are made. She is also not afraid of getting stuck in and helping either.”

The No10 flat was "all very tired", according to Mr Challis. "Let’s say the blinds were not of the level we would put in.

"And, in fairness, it was an era where everything was very matching and coordinated, and times move on."

Asked if it rivalled the Johnson's luxe revamp, Mr Challis and his wife Alice said: "Oooh, no... Far less glitz."

Boris Johnson and his wife Carrie came under fire for their lavish revamp of the Downing Street flat (PA)

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has moved into the No11 flat where the Johnsons used to live.

He recently joked that the lavish wallpaper - famously used to transform the flat from the "John Lewis nightmare" left behind by Theresa May -had begun to peel off the walls.

Mr Hunt told a Spectator awards do in November that he was keen to get inside to take a look after reports that Mrs Johnson had commissioned £840-a-roll wallpaper for the flat.

“The massive disappointment was to discover that that wallpaper – this may be a world exclusive – had started to peel off of its own accord and had actually been painted over by Liz Truss," he said.

“So I will be saying to my children, ‘scratch over there, there's gold in the walls’.”

Upmarket interior designer Lulu Lytle oversaw the redecoration of Mr Johnson's flat, which cost at least £112,000 - well beyond the £30,000 annual public grant PMs are given to decorate their living quarters.

Mr Johnson came under fire for trying to get Tory donor Lord Brownlow to fund the lavish revamp.

He eventually paid the costs himself after a major backlash. But the Tory party was fined £17,800 by the Electoral Commission for breaching electoral law over the way the money was recorded.

See the full feature in the February issue of Tatler available via digital download and on newsstands from Thursday 5th January.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.