Prince William set to ‘take on the morning school run’ when he and Kate move to Windsor
Prince William is set to ‘take on the morning school run’ when he and Kate move to Windsor with George, Charlotte and Louis – as friends of the royal couple say they will still be in London ‘a great deal’.
The Duke of Cambridge, 40, will take his three children to school when they begin the new term together next month.
William and Kate have selected the £21,000-a-year Lambrook School near Ascot, Berkshire for the young royals – just a 15-minute drive from their four-bedroom Adelaide Cottage on the Queen’s Home Park estate.
As revealed by the Daily Mail earlier this year, the couple had set their heart on the highly regarded co-educational school set in 52 acres of grounds to replicate their own happy childhoods in the county.
But their offices and charitable empire will continue to operate out of London, with the couple returning several days a week for work.
To all intents and purposes, though, Adelaide Cottage will be their main home, day-to-day.
One source told the Mail: ‘Kensington Palace will remain their official residence now and in the future. Their office will remain there – private office, press office, the lot. They expect to be in London a great deal still. How many days is yet to be decided.
‘They will need to work out over the next few months how they balance everything. But they lived in Norfolk during lockdown and it still worked. It can be done.’
The Duke of Cambridge (pictured at the wheel), 40, will take his three children to school when they begin the new term together next month
William and Kate have selected the £21,000-a-year Lambrook School near Ascot, Berkshire, for their three children
Prince George, Prince William, Princess Charlotte, Prince Louis and Kate on the balcony of Buckingham Palace on June 5
William and Kate will move with their three children George, Charlotte and Louis to Adelaide Cottage in Windsor (file picture)
All three children – George, Charlotte and Louis – will be sent to the prestigious £21,000-a-year Lambrook School in Berkshire
Moving from Kensington Palace means they can set down roots just a stone’s throw from the Queen at Windsor Castle.
The family will also be only 30 miles from the children’s grandparents Michael and Carole Middleton, uncle James and aunt Pippa in Bucklebury.
And the benefit of a mixed school, boasting just 610 boys and girls aged three to 13, is that all three children can attend together, cutting down the need for separate school runs and security teams.
The closeness to their new home will also enable Kate and William to continue to do the school runs themselves as much as possible.
It offers boarding but George, nine, Charlotte, seven, and four-year-old Louis will be day pupils.
The Good Schools Guide says the prep school has a ‘heart of gold’ and offers pupils ‘total freedom to explore, provided you’ve got your wellies on’.
It boasts of ‘first-class teaching and superb facilities’ including a 25-metre swimming pool, a nine-hole golf course, an Astroturf, squash court and a new £6million Queen’s Building for ICT and academic learning.
The prospectus quotes one parent calling it ‘the most magical place for our children to spend time, and they can often be seen rosy-cheeked and perfecting handstands, throwing balls or racing to the three stumps’.
Friends say the Cambridges loved the ethos of the school which is hugely successful but more ‘under the radar’ than others in the area.
Many of the pupils go on to public schools such as Eton, for which George is earmarked and where his father and uncle Harry went.
The couple’s decision to move to Windsor was driven by the wish to find a balance for their family.
They wanted to allow their children the opportunity to enjoy as normal a life as possible while they continue to serve as senior working royals, sources told the Mail.
‘Their children are at the heart of every decision they make,’ said one royal insider.
‘The duke and duchess want to give them as “normal” start as is possible and this is their chance to give them that for as long as they can.
‘Kensington Palace is a bit of a goldfish bowl. The children can’t play in the grounds without being seen.
‘They are very fortunate, of course.
‘The duke and duchess are very conscious of that.
‘But they are hopeful this will afford a happy medium between their public and private lives.’
Kensington Palace – where the couple have lived until now at 20-room Apartment 1A – will remain their official residence both now and after they become the Prince and Princess of Wales.
The couple are said to be ‘acutely conscious’ that £4.5million of taxpayers’ money was used to refurbish the Kensington premises for them and want to ensure it is still a ‘hub’ of activity.
(‘Two kitchens Kate’ was a criticism frequently flung at the couple when it emerged there would be a staff cooking area installed as well one for the couple personally.)
In 2013 aides even said it would be their ‘forever home’ and somewhere they would live for a ‘long, long time’.
Yesterday sources told the Mail that remained true but added their circumstances had changed – they are parents to three young children and are adapting to suit their needs.
‘I think the word forever home has been a bit of a lesson for them. It’s certainly their long-term official residence still.
‘But it’s [also] about evaluation.
‘Things have changed for them as a family since then – they didn’t know what school their children were going to be sent to, for example,’ said a source.
The Cambridges will also keep on Anmer Hall, the ten-bedroom property in Norfolk gifted as a wedding present by the Queen.
The couple adore the house and would have happily brought up their children there but for its distance from London.
William and Kate will retain Apartment 1A at Kensington Palace as a base in London, where their staff will be located
The Cambridges also intend to also keep their current country home at Anmer Hall on the Sandringham estate in Norfolk
However given Prince Charles’s plans for a slimmed-down monarchy and the cost of living crunch, the couple’s insistence on running three homes may attract unwelcome criticism.
‘They thought long and hard about this and are not unaware [of the criticism]. But they love Anmer, I would say it is the place they actually view as home,’ one friend said yesterday.
‘It’s where they would have brought their family up if the logistics had been different.
‘They are very serious about being senior members of the Royal Family, they want to play a part and this is about finding a compromise that works with their family.
‘It’s about balance and what it the best for their kids while trying to serve as royals.
‘All of this is about them putting their children first. They really are such great parents, George, Charlotte and Louis are the centre of their world.’
Fortunately their new home, Adelaide Cottage, is fairly modest by royal standards albeit with a principal bedroom decorated with gilded dolphins and rope ornament reused from the 19th century royal yacht Royal George and a marble Graeco-Egyptian fireplace.
With just four bedrooms, the couple will have no live-in staff for the first time, with their nanny, housekeeper and security team living nearby.
The Grade II listed property is owned by the Crown Estate and the couple will pay ‘market rent’, sources say.
The Queen and the Prince of Wales have both been ‘very supportive’, the Mail understands.
Indeed Her Majesty personally extended the invitation to live at Adelaide Cottage.
A source added: ‘It’s not the main factor but clearly their close proximity to the Queen – I’d say it’s a brisk ten-minute walk – will allow them to spent more time with her.
‘The duke adores his grandmother and values her opinion more than ever.’
Aides stress that any refurbishment needed above and beyond anything required by an ‘ordinary tenant’ would be funded by the couple privately.
‘There are no major costs. They already benefit from having the security in place there at Windsor,’ said one.
The house was built in 1831 for Queen Adelaide as a summer retreat and was the grace and favour home of Peter Townsend, the former aide whose affair with Princess Margaret rocked the monarchy in the 1950s.
According to a source, the Queen offered the Grade-II listed property to Harry and Meghan as a gift shortly after they married.
The couple allegedly went for a viewing and liked it but ultimately moved to Frogmore Cottage before quitting the UK entirely.
Meanwhile, George and Charlotte were pupils at Thomas’s Battersea until the start of the summer while Louis attended Willcocks Nursery in Kensington.
Yesterday in a statement Kensington Palace thanked the school for George and Charlotte’s ‘happy start to their education’.
It added the royal couple ‘are pleased to have found a school for all three of their children which shares a similar ethos and values to Thomas’s’.
Jonathan Perry, headmaster at Lambrook, said the school was ‘delighted’ the royal children will be joining and looked forward to welcoming the family.
Ben Thomas, principal of Thomas’s London Day Schools, wished George and Charlotte ‘every happiness and success at their next schools and beyond’.