London underground
"The super-rich are maximizing property value in the heart of London as
never before. But they're not building up, they're digging down,
creating mega-basements or 'iceberg homes' - nicknamed because there's
more square footage under the ground than above. Over the last ten years
an estimated 2000 new basements have been dug in central London. Into
these multi-level subterranean structures owners are building anything
from cinemas, swimming pools, beauty parlours, squash courts, wine
cellars and servants' quarters. Some take as long as three years to
complete. As well as the noise of the digging, fleets of concrete mixers
and lorries taking away the dug soil service the sites. So life for
neighbours in some of London's poshest addresses has been hell.
As
the Royal Borough of Kensington Council responds to angry residents and
tries to regulate the number of mega-basements and the disruption they
cause, this BBC film goes behind the hoardings to look inside the
extraordinary structures and talk to builders, owners and irate
neighbours to tell the story of the conflict that has gripped the
millionaires and gold-paved streets of London's smartest postcodes."
Enabled by technology like this: http://www.wired.com/2015/02/nanotech-skylight-looks-just-like-sun-shining-overhead/
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