In 1997, Papadakis founded a new publishing house,
Papadakis Publisher, with his daughter Alexandra. In addition to books on architecture and the decorative arts the company broadened its scope to include books on natural science, including the acclaimed series
Pollen,
Seeds and
Fruit in association with the
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, leading to his election as a
fellow of the Linnean Society.
Pollen and
Seeds were awarded a joint gold medal by the American Independent Publishers' Association in 2006 as Outstanding Books of the Year, and his first science book
Why the Lion Grew its Mane was long-listed by the
Royal Society in 2007. In 1987 Papadakis bought Church Island in the Thames and commissioned Dr.
Basil Al Bayati, an architect whose books
Architect and
Recent Works he had published, to design a house for him. "For his luxury mansion on his Greek-island-in-the-Thames, the great man chose not Michael Graves, one of the deconstructivists or even CZWG, but pragmatic classicist Basil Al Bayati, whom he instructed to design a country house in the English turn-of-the-century manner." The plan of the house is based on multiple units of structural geometrical forms and utilises extensive brickwork in a postmodern, art & craft style. It was "designed in a vernacular manner, using building materials similar to those traditionally used in the area." In 1988, Church Island House was exhibited at the
German Architecture Museum in
Frankfurt in an exhibition titled the Architecture of Pluralism that included work by
James Gowan,
Terry Farrell,
Charles Jencks and some twenty other internationally recognised architects. In 2007 he purchased
Monkey Island Hotel in
Bray, Berkshire, but died a few months afterwards. Alexandra Papadakis continued to run the hotel until it was sold in 2015. ==References==