Since selling Foxtons, Hunt has made significant investments into commercial and residential property in central London. These investments, along with other family property holdings, are managed by Ocubis Ltd. In December 2011 Ocubis received planning consent for a 120,000 square foot mixed use redevelopment of its building at 150 Holborn, designed by Make Architects. Ocubis also refurbished the 120,000 sq ft Fulham Green Campus next to
Putney Bridge tube station in 2012 and their agents
Savills,
Frost Meadowcroft and Hanover Green let these offices to tenants including
Emma Bridgewater,
Hurtigruten, Green Fields Technology and
Sweaty Betty. In May 2013 Ocubis purchased the
Grade II* listed building at No.5
St James's Square, formerly the Libyan Embassy.
The Times newspaper reports that Hunt plans to refurbish the building to provide 15,000 sq ft of office space, along with 13 luxury flats currently under construction on an adjoining site. In October 2015, the parent company for Ocubis filed accounts showing that pre-tax profits in 2014 reached £3 million, up from £1.6 million the year before, with staff numbers rising to 82 from 61. The company is said to be seeking rents of £160 per sq ft for its office building at 5 St James's Square, making it among the most expensive in London. In 2010, Hunt formed Bacchus Partners, which invests in sites suitable for residential or retail development in the
South East of England. Focusing on sites between £200,000 and £1 million in value, Bacchus works with local property professionals who identify suitable investments in their local area in exchange for an equity stake in the development project. Hunt owns a property in
Kensington Palace Gardens, London, known as London's most expensive street, where he plans to house his collection of vintage cars.
Pavilion Hunt owns and operates
Pavilion, a business members' club in
Kensington High Street. Pavilion is an up-market serviced office catering to entrepreneurs and business executives; it has been described by
The Times as "...an office rental club aimed at affluent start-ups". It opened under the name "Dryland" in 2011.
Heveningham Hall Hunt purchased
Heveningham Hall is a 5000-acre 18th-century Suffolk estate in 1994. It hosts an annual motorsport and classic car event, the Heveningham Hall
Concours d'Elegance. It also hosts an annual country fair, reported to attract over 10,000 attendees. All proceeds from the fair go to local community charities. The Grade I listed Palladian country house was designed by 18th-century English architects
Sir Robert Taylor and
James Wyatt; its garden was designed by noted 18th century landscape artist
Capability Brown and is being restored by Kim Wilkie. The project is expected to require the planting of 800,000 trees. Wilkie is implementing a set of plans drawn up by Brown that had lain abandoned since 1782. The plans had hitherto been unrecognised as Brown's work.
Wilderness Reserve In 2013 Hunt launched the
Wilderness Reserve, an area of restored natural lakes, parkland and woods surrounding Heveningham Hall situated in
Suffolk's
Yox Valley on the
Heritage Coast. The reserve is part of a recently implemented design by the noted landscape architect 'Lancelot 'Capability' Brown (1716–1783). In developing the Reserve, Hunt purchased 5000 acres of land, restored buildings and oversaw the reintroduction of wildlife and various species of flora and fauna. Hunt's private residence is adjacent to the Reserve; within the Reserve Hunt has made various buildings available for private hire, including
Sibton Hall. He told the
Financial Times: "Farming alone won't pay for a modern estate to survive. Real estate will.". In 2014, Hunt also purchased Cockfield Hall in Yoxford in Suffolk, England, a Grade I listed private house standing in 76 acres (31 ha) of historic parkland, partly dating from the 16th century. ==Personal life==