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Ghislaine Maxwell’s £3.2 Million Belgravia Townhouse — Once Home to the Notorious Prince Andrew and Virginia Giuffre Photograph — Silently Withdrawn from the Market

April 1, 2026 by gobeyond1 Leave a Comment

Ghislaine Maxwell’s £3.2 Million Belgravia Townhouse — Once Home to the Notorious Prince Andrew and Virginia Giuffre Photograph — Silently Withdrawn from the Market

The upscale London property long associated with Ghislaine Maxwell has been quietly taken off the market after failing to attract a buyer. The elegant four-bedroom townhouse in the exclusive Belgravia neighborhood, valued at around £3.2 million (approximately $4.1 million USD), carries heavy historical significance as the location where one of the most damaging images in the Jeffrey Epstein scandal was captured.

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According to recent real estate records and British media reports, the residence — widely reported as 44 Kinnerton Street (sometimes referenced in connection with nearby Halsey Street addresses in the area) — no longer appears on active listings. The property gained worldwide notoriety due to the infamous 2001 photograph showing Prince Andrew with his arm around then-17-year-old Virginia Giuffre, while Maxwell smiles in the background. That image, taken inside the home by Epstein himself, became central evidence in Giuffre’s allegations against the British royal, who has always denied any sexual misconduct.

Maxwell originally sold the townhouse in 2021 for roughly £1.6–2.1 million equivalent to help cover her legal defense costs ahead of her U.S. sex-trafficking trial, in which she was later convicted. The property returned to the market in early 2025 at a significantly higher asking price of about £3.25–3.45 million, reflecting renovations and its freehold status. Despite the prime location in one of London’s most prestigious districts, near Hyde Park and high-end shops, it struggled to sell. Reports from August 2025 confirmed the listing had been removed after months on the market, with some outlets noting a price reduction of £200,000 earlier in the process that still failed to draw serious offers.

The home’s interior, once described as charming and recently refurbished, included features that fueled tabloid headlines, such as the bathtub where Giuffre alleged certain encounters took place — claims Prince Andrew has vehemently denied. Its failure to sell has sparked speculation about whether the property’s dark association with the Epstein-Maxwell network continues to deter potential buyers, even years after Maxwell’s conviction and Epstein’s death.

This quiet withdrawal comes amid ongoing public interest in the Epstein case, amplified by Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl and renewed scrutiny of related documents. The townhouse stands as a physical reminder of the scandal’s reach into elite British society, where wealth and connections once appeared to offer protection.

Real estate experts suggest that high-profile properties linked to major controversies often face longer selling periods or require deeper discounts. Whether the owners will relist at a lower price or pursue a private sale remains unclear. For now, the elegant Belgravia facade hides its turbulent past behind a “no longer available” status, leaving the infamous photograph and its implications to linger in public memory without a new chapter for the property itself.

The development adds another layer to the Epstein saga’s enduring legacy, where locations tied to the network continue to evoke discomfort and fascination long after the main events. As calls for greater transparency in remaining files persist, even bricks and mortar associated with the scandal seem resistant to moving on cleanly.

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