Freddie Mercury’s London mansion up for sale, first time since 1980
- Garden Lodge in London’s Kensington neighbourhood is on market for offers over £30 million (US$38 million). It is not publicly listed
- Queen frontman died in the house in 1991 aged 45. The home’s garden gate, inscribed with graffiti from fans, sold for US$521,000 in September

Freddie Mercury ’s sanctuary in London, where he lived the last decade of his life, is on sale for the first time in nearly half a century – minus his “exquisite clutter”.
Garden Lodge, as the neo-Georgian brick home in the upmarket Kensington neighbourhood is known, is for sale by Knight Frank for offers exceeding £30 million (US$38 million). It is not publicly listed.
Mercury, the frontman for Queen, bought the house in 1980 – the year the band’s album The Game, with hits Another One Bites the Dust and Crazy Little Thing Called Love, topped the charts. He reportedly paid cash for the property, which was listed for more than £500,000, according to Mercury: An Intimate Biography of Freddie Mercury.

“I saw the house, fell in love with it, and within a half an hour it was mine,” Mercury boasted, according to the book.
Mercury had extensive renovations done to the house and loaded it with precious artwork, including pieces by Picasso, Dalí and Matisse.
“I like to be surrounded by splendid things,” Mercury said. “I want to lead the Victorian life, surrounded by exquisite clutter.”
Mercury died in the house in 1991 of Aids-related pneumonia at the age of 45.