<p>The credit crunch seems to be taking its toll on one of the world’s richest Indians, Lakshmi N Mittal, who has put up one of his mansions in central London up for sale.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The steel tycoon had bought the property on Palace Green in Kensington for £117 million in 2008, when it was declared the most expensive home in Britain.<br /><br />However, according to the Sunday Times, he may end up making a loss on the neo-Georgian building after it went on the market earlier this month for £110 million. The 12-bedroom palatial home was bought for Mittal’s son, Aditya, from Israeli-American financier Noam Gottesman. The entire first floor of the 14,736 sq ft property is dedicated to the master bedroom quarters, with a separate wing referred to as “Mrs Mittal’s dressing room”. <br /><br />But Aditya, who is the CEO of ArcelorMittal, and his family reportedly never moved into the new mansion. While the house does not have a swimming pool, it comes with planning permission for basement work and has a dedicated storage room for art, a flower room, a silver room and tutorial and homework rooms for kids. Lakshmi Mittal himself lives nearby at Kensington Palace Gardens, dubbed London’s “billionaire’s row” with neighbours including fellow tycoons such as Roman Abramovich and Len Blavatnik.<br /><br />As a result of the credit crunch and a fall in demand for steel from China, Mittal’s fortunes took a hit of an estimated £2.7 billion last year, resulting in him being deposed as the richest man in Britain by Russian industrialist Alisher Usmanov after eight years at the helm.</p>
<p>The credit crunch seems to be taking its toll on one of the world’s richest Indians, Lakshmi N Mittal, who has put up one of his mansions in central London up for sale.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The steel tycoon had bought the property on Palace Green in Kensington for £117 million in 2008, when it was declared the most expensive home in Britain.<br /><br />However, according to the Sunday Times, he may end up making a loss on the neo-Georgian building after it went on the market earlier this month for £110 million. The 12-bedroom palatial home was bought for Mittal’s son, Aditya, from Israeli-American financier Noam Gottesman. The entire first floor of the 14,736 sq ft property is dedicated to the master bedroom quarters, with a separate wing referred to as “Mrs Mittal’s dressing room”. <br /><br />But Aditya, who is the CEO of ArcelorMittal, and his family reportedly never moved into the new mansion. While the house does not have a swimming pool, it comes with planning permission for basement work and has a dedicated storage room for art, a flower room, a silver room and tutorial and homework rooms for kids. Lakshmi Mittal himself lives nearby at Kensington Palace Gardens, dubbed London’s “billionaire’s row” with neighbours including fellow tycoons such as Roman Abramovich and Len Blavatnik.<br /><br />As a result of the credit crunch and a fall in demand for steel from China, Mittal’s fortunes took a hit of an estimated £2.7 billion last year, resulting in him being deposed as the richest man in Britain by Russian industrialist Alisher Usmanov after eight years at the helm.</p>