EDEN CONFIDENTIAL: Gina Coladangelo sells family home to Gordon Ramsay for £7.5million

If she ever tires of turning her boyfriend, Matt Hancock, into a TV star, Gina Coladangelo has a lucrative side career as a real estate mogul.

I can reveal that she and her ex-husband, Oliver Tress, managed to sell their marital home to passionate TV chef Gordon Ramsay and his wife, Tana, for a staggering £7.5 million.

It’s an amazing price for the South London area. Not only is that nearly double the £3.8m Gina and Tress paid in 2015, but it’s £2.5m more than the top price previously paid for any property on their street.

Zoopla had estimated its value at between £3.8 million and £4.6 million.

A similar house on the same street, with a 90ft garden, was recently put on the market for £4m. “It’s a beautiful house,” one of the couple’s friends tells me.

The sale, which Land Registry documents confirm took place in January, is all the more impressive as it comes as British property prices are forecast to fall by 10 per cent.

Gina and her ex-husband, Oliver Tress, managed to sell their marital home to fiery TV chef Gordon Ramsay and his wife, Tana, for a staggering £7.5 million.

If she ever tires of turning her boyfriend, Matt Hancock, into a TV star, Gina Coladangelo has a lucrative side career as a real estate mogul.

The staggering £7.5m is almost double the £3.8m Gina and Tress paid in 2015. Zoopla had estimated her worth at between £3.8m and £4.6m.

The staggering £7.5m is almost double the £3.8m Gina and Tress paid in 2015. Zoopla had estimated her worth at between £3.8m and £4.6m.

The five-bedroom Edwardian house is located in one of London’s most desirable areas. Ramsay, 56, and his wife, 48, bought it on a joint behalf of Gina and Tress, the founder of the Oliver Bonas luxury homewares and clothing chain.

Gina, 45, left Tress, 55, with whom she has three children, for former health secretary Hancock, 44, who competed on I’m a Celebrity. . . Get me out of here!.

Ramsay, who is worth an estimated £175m, already owns a huge house, said to be worth £7m, less than a mile away.

His spokesman has declined to comment, but he may have bought the house due to extensive work currently underway on his other London platform.

Last year, it was reported that he, Tana and their five children moved in temporarily after construction began on a super basement.

The couple also own vacation homes in California and Cornwall, where, at one point, they owned three properties.

Lottie posse attends ‘new Boujis nightclub’

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He The former owners of Boujis, the South Kensington club where young Kate Middleton danced and Prince Harry drank ‘Crack Baby’ shots, were hoping to lure their former clientele to the ‘VIP launch’ of their nearby new nightspot, B London, Thursday.

While the Prince and Princess of Wales are over that sort of thing, and Harry is too busy meditating in California, the club did manage to attract a minor royal, Lord Freddie Windsor, 43, son of Prince Michael of Kent. Freddie’s wife, actress Sophie Winkleman, chose to stay at home.

For glamour, the owners, who include Jake Parkinson-Smith, grandson of celebrity photographer Norman Parkinson, might have waited for Kate Moss. Instead, they were gifted with the supermodel’s half-sister, Lottie, pictured.

Returning from her new life in Los Angeles, she wore lace stockings and a mini dress while showing off the face tattoo that is said to have alarmed her family.

Lottie, 25, joined the revellers, including Astrid Harbord, 42, who with her sister Davina became known as the ‘Hardcore Sisters’ due to their enthusiasm for the party.

Harry Page reprises the role of rugby star Alicia

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Luscious soprano Alicia Lowes has twice sung to a packed Twickenham stadium, while her fiancé, Alex Simpson, is in the Guinness Book of Records as the youngest person to row across oceans three times.

But her experience in the spotlight pales in comparison to that of one of Alicia’s younger cousins: Jasper Dyer, who, at age six, was watched by a worldwide audience of nearly two billion when Prince Harry and Meghan Markle got married in Windsor.

Now, Jasper will walk again, this time in front of 250 guests when Alex and Alicia get married next month in Monmouthshire.

‘He’s going to be my page,’ says Alicia, who sings the National Anthem at the first match of the Women’s Six Nations next weekend. One particular joy, she adds, is that her uncle, Jasper’s father, Mark Dyer, will also be at the wedding, after battling stomach cancer.

Mentor to the Duke of Sussex, the former Welsh Guards officer features heavily in Harry’s memoir, Spare.

“Last year was hell for Mark, but he’s come around the corner and he’s cancer free,” Alicia tells me.

Mossie’s lifestyle empire goes west to take on Gwynnie

Kate Moss (file photo).  Moss has applied to trademark her brand

Kate Moss (file photo). Moss has applied to trademark her “wellness” brand in the US. She sells everything from £95 face creams to chamomile tea and aromatherapy candles.

Watch out, Gwyneth Paltrow! First, Kate Moss launched her own lifestyle brand, Cosmoss, to compete with Hollywood starlet Goop.

Now, Moss plans to take on Gwynnie in her own backyard.

I can reveal that Moss has applied to trademark its ‘wellness’ brand in the US. It sells everything from £95 face creams to chamomile tea and aromatherapy candles.

The 49-year-old supermodel, previously known for her hedonistic lifestyle, may also have to compete against the Duchess of Sussex as Meghan is rumored to be relaunching her own lifestyle blog, The Tig.

Last year, I revealed that Moss had applied to Britain’s Intellectual Property Office for the Cosmoss trademark for a variety of applications, but faced a bitter legal battle with a Danish pharmaceutical company, Pharmacosmos, which formally opposed his application.

Apsley cuts clan ties with baby’s name

Delighted by the birth of his first son, Lord Apsley, however, he decided to ensure that his son and heir was not too associated with previous generations of his family at Cirencester Park in Gloucestershire, where Princes William and Harry played polo.

Ben Bathurst, as Apsley is known, and his wife Sara have named their son Theodore, or ‘Teddy’.

He tells me, “Inherited surnames haven’t served us very well in recent generations, so my wife and I decided on Teddy together.”

Ben’s father, Allen, Earl Bathurst, was involved in a bitter feud with his American-born stepmother, Gloria, who cut him out of her will and gave the estate to two interior designers. Gloria was the second wife of Allen’s father, Henry, known as ‘Barmy’ among his friends.

“We lost my great-grandfather, Allen, in World War II, and my grandfather, Henry, almost split the estate, leaving a large part to Gloria,” explains Ben, 33. “Since I returned to help run the farm in 2020, Sara and I have been very focused on carrying the torch for the future. Receiving someone else’s name only evokes the past, and we are very concerned about what comes next.

Helena, with her thighs spread, puts City in a vertigo

Helena Morrisey from a recent post on her Instagram.  The 57-year-old financier, who has nine children, has eschewed the sensible work outfits she usually wears in favor of a bold Pucci gown that is reminiscent of the Versace safety-pin dress made famous by Elizabeth Hurley.

Helena Morrisey from a recent post on her Instagram. The 57-year-old financier, who has nine children, has eschewed the sensible work outfits she usually wears in favor of a bold Pucci dress that is reminiscent of the Versace safety-pin dress made famous by Elizabeth Hurley.

The city’s ‘superwoman’, Helena Morrissey, says she has been ’emboldened’ by Oscar winner Michelle Yeoh’s ‘wonderful’ acceptance speech in which she declared: ‘Ladies, don’t let anyone tell you that you’ll ever they are past their prime.’

So the 57-year-old financier, who has nine children, has eschewed the sensible work outfits she usually wears in favor of a bold Pucci gown that’s rather reminiscent of the Versace safety-pin dress that made Elizabeth Hurley’s name.

England’s World Cup rugby hero Jonny Wilkinson is bringing his loss-making fashion brand back on track after 13 years.

The former rugby star went into business with his brother, Mark, and created the Fineside clothing label in 2010.

However, the label’s documents, on file at Companies House, reveal that the couple have moved to make the company dormant. The Newcastle-based brand, which used to sell shirts, polo shirts, sweaters and T-shirts, has paid off all creditors and has zero assets according to the latest available accounts.

The company had struggled to get out of the red before Wilkinson made the decision.

He is best known for winning England’s Rugby World Cup in 2003 with a last minute drop goal and was voted BBC Sports Personality of the Year for his pivotal role in the triumph.

It appears that England’s Six Nations team is not the only loss-making interest in Wilkinson’s life.

His royal peerage has just been upgraded from a county to a dukedom, but that’s not the limit of Prince Edward’s progress. I can reveal that the former Earl of Wessex, now the Duke of Edinburgh, has also taken over one of his late father’s charities. The Edinburgh Trust’s No 2 account, which supports ‘general charities’, sounds rather drab, but its treasure chest contains a whopping £4.2m. That compares with £110,000 held by the Earl and Countess of Wessex Charitable Trust before it was merged with Prince Philip’s more substantial fund.