Monday 15 August 2022 02:01 AM Cambridge's move to four-bedroom Adelaide Cottage will mean 'not having a ... trends now
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Prince William and Kate Middleton's move to a four-bedroom home on the Windsor estate will mean 'not having a live-in nanny for the first time in their children's lives'.
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, are reportedly set to uproot their family from Kensington, west London, to Adelaide Cottage in Berkshire this summer in order to be closer to the Queen.
However, their young children will not have Spanish Norland nanny Maria Borrallo on hand because she will live elsewhere, according to The Telegraph.
Ms Borrallo was hired by Kate and William, both 40, to help look after Prince George, nine, when he was eight months old and she now cares for Princess Charlotte, seven, and Prince Louis, four, too.
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, are reportedly set to uproot their family from Kensington, west London, to a four-bed property in Windsor 'to be closer to the Queen'
The four-bedroom Adelaide Cottage (pictured) which has been recently refurbished and is on the Windsor estate
The 'Spanish supernanny' trained at the prestigious Norland College which has been producing childminders for the rich and famous since 1892.
Re-erected in 1831, the Cambridge's new Grade II-listed retreat is just a short walk from St George's Chapel and Windsor Castle, and sits proudly on the 655-acre royal estate in Berkshire.
Sources close to the family suggest the Cambridges were keen to be closer to the Queen, 96, who has suffered episodic mobility issues in recent months and also secure a good school for their three children.
George, Charlotte