Charlotte’s Story

I have relocated more times than I can count, overseas and within the UK, with children and without. I know what it feels like to try and find somewhere to live from afar, and to land somewhere new with too much luggage, children who need settling and work that won't pause. It’s a lot.

Moving to a new country or city is daunting and finding somewhere to live in the right neighbourhood for you is a legitimately tough challenge. Choosing the wrong house or the wrong area costs a fortune and has the potential to sour the entire relocation. But get it right, and the new experiences will change your life. I wrote more about my relocations and what they taught me about life and unexpected consequences, in the Journal.

I have always had a passion for property. With property developer parents and spending my school holidays restoring an old farmhouse in Brittany, it’s in my blood. After exiting my tech company in 2024, I acquired an apartment on Great Pulteney Street knowing it needed significant work. The piano nobile — the grand first floor — had been carved into flats in the 1980s and barely touched since. Working with architects, conservation specialists and skilled local contractors, I restored it back to its original dual aspect form, exposing original cornicing, marble fireplaces and sash windows. We improved the energy rating from E to C — something Historic England's own guidance suggests is rarely achieved in a Grade I property.

I adore this property, and the city of Bath and hope I can help people with their Bath relocation or make a project stay work for them. 

Queen Charlotte of Bath brings all this together. Beautiful Georgian property, easy to move in and stay for a few months so that you can test out Bath, the neighbourhoods and work out the optimum school run. Or simply enjoy easy living for a project or temporary work assignment in the South West. 

Not a hotel. Not a holiday let. A home — fully furnished, bills included, ready from the moment you walk in — for people in the middle of something: a relocation, a renovation, a project. A breathing space while life rearranges itself around you.

I'm building a small, carefully chosen portfolio of properties across Bath's most desirable streets. Each one restored or curated to a standard I'd want to live in myself. Each one available for the kind of stay that actually gives you time to find your feet — a month, three months, six.

If you're relocating to Bath and need somewhere that works from day one, I'd love to hear from you.

Queen Charlotte of Bath in red sweater adjusting a large decorative gold chandelier in a room with ornate crown molding.

Installing crystal droplets in the first chandelier to go up in the piano nobile in Great Pulteney Street

Design & restoration journey