The billionaire ruler of Dubai has been given permission to knock down his palatial mansion in Surrey – and replace it with one more than three times the size of the original and featuring a dedicated ‘party room’.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum has been given the green light to build the mammoth three-storey structure, including a mega-basement with an indoor swimming pool.
Plans seen by Daily Mail also show the Middle Eastern royal, who is one of the world’s richest men, is planning on erecting separate buildings for a ‘games/party’ room, gym and office.
The sprawling home is part of Sheikh Mohammed’s £75million Longcross Estate, which is next to Chobham Common, one of Europe’s most historical heathlands.
It was purchased by the Sheikh in the 1990s as a place to escape the stifling summer heat of the Gulf.
The 76-year-old previously caused outrage in December 2018 when he put up a horrific looking ‘prison-style’ barbed wire fence around the estate without planning permission, which one local said looked like a ‘concentration camp’.
It was alleged that the Sheikh illegally knocked down dozens of historic trees, subject to a Tree Preservation Order and more than a hundred years old, to make way for the metal border which blocked vital pathways for wildlife and caused anger among locals and environmental groups.
Despite breaking planning laws, Runnymede Borough Council granted retrospective planning permission.

The billionaire ruler of Dubai has been given permission to knock down his palatial mansion in Surrey – and replace it with one more than three times the size of the original

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum purchased the sprawling estate in the 1990s as a place to escape the stifling summer heat of the Gulf

Crown Prince of Dubai Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum (pictured left) with Princess Haya Bint Al Hussein
Now the Sheikh is planning on further transformation of his rural home counties estate.
In March, the council approved plans for a new house, which will be 1,002sqm above ground with a 1,495sqm basement.
The new structure will be 3.25 times larger than the original 770-square-metre building, which does not have a basement level.
Eight en-suite bedrooms, including a master with its own lounge and walk-in closet will feature in the new abode.
The basement will have two further en-suite bedrooms, a living room, gym, pool, cinema, sauna and underground car parking.
Surrey Wildlife Trust highlighted concerns after evidence of roosting bats in the pool building, which is due to be demolished.
According to the planning officer’s delegated report, ‘a bat mitigation strategy to avoid any adverse impacts from proposed demolition of the existing structures’ will be implemented.
It adds: ‘Surrey Wildlife Trust has commented that the works should proceed in line with the documents and recommendations by Dr Jonty Denton [who produced the bat surveys] and a condition requiring evidence of the mitigation and compensation being installed within the new building and grounds is recommended.

Plans for the new palatial home, which will have eight en-suite bedrooms, including a master with its own lounge and walk-in closet, and a 1,495sqm basement

Plans seen by Daily Mail also show the Middle Eastern royal is planning on erecting separate buildings for a ‘games/party’ room, gym and office
‘With respect to amphibians, a precautionary approach to any clearance of suitable great crested newt habitat would be advisable and if any evidence of great crested newts is recorded, an informative to this effect will be included.’
The Sheikh’s team have submitted three lawful development certificates for permitted development, which are currently being decided by the council.
This would include a new building for a garden equipment store and a home office.
Another is for the proposed games/party room and gym, while the third is for two detached garden buildings for a garage, garden store and ‘a roof void which will form a space for bats’.
Last year, Sheikh Mohammed won a battle with local planning chiefs for the development of two semi-underground warehouses on his estate.
According to planning documents seen by Daily Mail, the warehouses will accommodate items used by his entourage of nearly 300 staff, including vehicles used by the Sheikh Mohammed’s private security, agricultural machinery and furniture from the properties on the estate.
Flooding experts at Surrey County Council lodged a planning objection against the proposed warehouses over concerns about the lack of provision for the drainage of water.
Runnymede Borough Council granted planning permission for the development but said the Sheikh’s planning agents should submit ‘details of the design of a surface water drainage scheme’ to them for approval before construction can commence.

A proposed bat roost is part of the plans after Surrey Wildlife Trust highlighted evidence of roosting bats in the pool building, which is due to be demolished

The 76-year-old previously caused outrage in December 2018 when he put up a horrific looking ‘prison-style’ barbed wire fence around the estate without planning permission

One local said looked the fencing around the estate made it look like a ‘concentration camp’
The Sheikh’s plans to transform the historic estate have however come into conflict with the views of nearby residents.
An unnamed neighbour told Daily Mail last year that the estate was like ‘his own little kingdom’.
Margaret Parker, 66, who lives in a property just outside the estate, added: ‘They do what they want up there. It’s a strange place. It feels like they want complete privacy but then why live in a village?
‘The guards have had issues with dog walkers going through the land on a public footpath. They don’t like that. There’s been a lot of friction and issues. It’s created a real problem.’
Sheikh Mohammed’s greatest passion is horse-racing and he is the owner of the Godolphin stables, which has produced some of the leading thoroughbreds in the sport.
In the last 15 years, he has also transformed Dubai into one of the most modern cities in the world developing the Palm Islands, the Burj Al-Arab hotel and the Burj Khalifa skyscraper which dominates the skyline of the city.
He also helped start Emirates airlines, sponsors of Arsenal and Paris St Germain football teams.
Sheikh Mohammed has an estimated £14billion fortune and has had at least six wives, and is divorced from all but one of them, his first wife Sheikha Hind bint Maktoum bin Juma Al Maktoum.

An unnamed neighbour told Daily Mail last year that the estate (pictured from above) was like ‘his own little kingdom’

The plans for the new warehouses which will accommodate items used by his entourage of nearly 300 staff, including vehicles used by the Sheikh Mohammed’s private security
The sheikh is also reported to have sired around 30 children.
He was engulfed in controversy following allegations in 2018 that his daughter Princess Latifa was being detained against her will in the United Arab Emirates, of whom the sheikh is vice-president.
Sheikh Mohammed was previously embroiled in a scandal over the detention of his daughter Princess Latifa in 2018.
She is reported to have escaped from the country that year, posting on Instagram: ‘My father ordered his men to ‘beat me until they kill me’. They didn’t allow me to travel or have any freedom of choice at all, I had to take it for myself.’
Princess Latifa was then picked up in international waters and returned to Dubai.
The High Court in London later ruled in 2020 that her allegations were true during a Fact Finding Judgement that found in favour of the Sheikh’s estranged wife Princess Haya, who fled Dubai with her two children to the UK.