This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.

Indian-Origin Broke Tycoon Forced To Demolish His Domed, $70 Million Australian Home

Indian-Origin Broke Tycoon Forced To Demolish His Domed, $70 Million Australian Home
9 News/Twitter

MELBOURNE -- An Indian-origin couple's 70 million dollar mansion in Australia, known as 'Taj-on-the-Swan', will be demolished after the former fertiliser magnates failed to reach an agreement with the local council.

Pankaj and Radhika Oswal are owners of Perth based domed structure that included a temple, a gym, an observatory with a revolving roof and parking for 17 cars.

The controversial property was being built by Oswals who fled the country in 2011 when their Burrup Fertilisers empire collapsed a year earlier.

Oswals left Australia owing millions of dollars in taxes, AAP news agency reported.

The couple purchased multiple blocks in a posh suburb of Perth in early 2000s to contruct their property.

The report said that they might have spent over 25 million dollars buying the land before starting construction of the home on the 6,600-square-metre site.

Work for the mansion ended in 2010 when the couple experienced business problems and left for Dubai.

It was estimated they had spend close to 40 million dollars on the unfinished home.

"An application filed by Oswal with State Administrative Tribunal to prevent the demolition was now being withdrawn, in time to cancel a full hearing that was scheduled for November 9," Peppermint Grove shire president Rachel Thomas said.

Preparation works must begin by December 31 and the site must be cleared by September 30, 2016, all at the Oswals' expense, Thomas said.

"We'd rather it was demolished sooner rather than later, and given this has been going on for so long, we really wanted to have certainty on the outcome, and it seemed a reasonable compromise to accept the timetable that was proposed," Thomas was qouted by AAP.

Thomas said police were regularly called to the unfinished property after it was left to fall into disrepair.

"We were aware that it was a real nuisance for the immediate neighbours in particular because of the antisocial behaviour. And with the graffiti, it was a real blot on the landscape," she said.

"It really impacted on the amenity of the area. We've had people smoking dope in there, police called out on a number of occasions because of noisy parties, people climbing over the wall - it's been a real problem.

"We are very pleased that we're heading for a resolution now and know that the building will be demolished," she added.

Contact HuffPost India

Close
This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.