Entrepreneur Leigh Osborne first saw the water tower in Kennington when he lived
in the high-rise building commonly known as The Cheese Grater near by.
On making enquiries, he found that the tower was for sale - for a very low price
compared to average property prices in London.
Leigh found out why the tower went cheaply only after he had bought it - all other prospective buyers were put off by the architectural survey.
It said the concrete staircase inside the tower would need to be taken out and replaced with a new structure which would have not made the project viable.
One of the many lucky strikes Leigh experienced with this building was that the original stairway
could be salvaged.
Leigh needed about 2 years to get his finance for redevelopment of the tower in place and then
pushed the refurbishment works through in an incredible 8 months.
A new cube-like structure to house a big kitchen/dining room, a living room on the floor above plus a generous roof terrace on top of that went up right next to the tower;
The new build connects to the tower through the structure that houses the lift; the lift serves 6 of the 8 floors.
On top of the tower sits the old water tank, now clad in lead with large windows to enjoy the
wonderful views over the London sky line.