The 'Villa Windsor' is a mansion located 4 Route du Champ d'Entraînement, Paris, within the Bois de Boulogne close to Neuilly-sur-Seine. The house is owned by the city of Paris and was the Paris home of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor.
Following Edward VIII's abdication as King Emperor in 1936, he was created Duke of Windsor by King George VI in 1937.
The villa was leased to the Windsors by the city of Paris at a nominal rent from 1952 to 1986. The Duke and Duchess both died in the house, in 1972 and 1986 respectively.
The Windsors also occupied the Moulin de la Tuilerie, in open countryside to the south west of Paris, where they spent most weekends and summer vacations.
The Duke and Duchess also occupied Château de la Croë on the Cap d'Antibes on the French Riviera (Côte D'Azur).
When Wallis died in 1986, the house was returned to the city of Paris. Later that year, the London-based Egyptian business man Mohamed Al-Fayed, owner of Harrods, signed a fifty-year lease on the villa.
The rent was one million francs a year, subject to the condition that he spend thirty million francs renovating the house.
Mohamed Al-Fayed extensively refurbished and restored the 'Villa Windsor', and for his efforts was promoted to an Officier in the Légion d'honneur in 1989.
Al-Fayed's son Dodi, and Diana, Princess of Wales visited the villa for half an hour on the day of their deaths in 1997.
In July 1997, Al-Fayed announced that an auction of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor's possessions from the Villa Windsor would take place later that year in New York. He had bought the contents of the property for the equivalent of US$4.5 million from the principal beneficiary of the Duchess's estate, the Pasteur Institute. The items to be offered for sale had personal value for the royal family and included the desk at which Edward had abdicated in 1936, a collection of some ten thousand photographs, and a doll given to Edward by his mother, Queen Mary.