Showing posts with label Roads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roads. Show all posts

Pavilion Road


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Location: Pavilion Road, Kensington and Chelsea, London, England, United Kingdom. (51°2949N 0°935W).

Pavilion Road
Pavilion Road is a street in Knightsbridge in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, London. It runs parallel to Sloane Street and is accessed from Sloane Square in the southern end and Basil Street in the northern end. Mainly a residential street, Bellville Sassoon which was formerly located along here, serving most of the female members of the royal family and many prominent entertainers and socialites over the years. Searcy, located at 30 Pavilion Road in an old pumping station, is one of Britain's top catering firms. A fire station was built in June 1881. Holy Trinity Church of England Primary School and Mica Gallery are located at the Cadogan Gardens intersection. Also of note are Marland House (today used as flats), Herbert House, and Hans House.

History of Pavilion Road:
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King's Road


Google Street View of King's Road


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Location: King's Road, Kensington and Chelsea, London, England, United Kingdom. (51.48737°N 0.168874°W).
Phone: +44 20 7824 8133


King's Road
King's Road or Kings Road, known popularly as The King's Road or The KR, is a major, well-known street stretching through Chelsea and Fulham, both in west London. It is traditionally associated with 1960s style, and fashion figures such as Mary Quant and Vivienne Westwood. Sir Oswald Mosley's Blackshirt movement had a barracks on the street in the 1930s.

History of King's Road:
King's Road derives its name from its function as a private road used by King Charles II to travel to Kew. It remained a private royal road until 1830, but people with connections were able to use it. Some houses date from the early 18th century. Thomas Arne lived at No. 215 and is believed to have composed "Rule Britannia" there. Ellen Terry lived in the same house from 1904–1920, and also Peter Ustinov (Actor and playwright), the house is commemorated by a blue plaque. Photographer Christina Broom was born in 1862 at No 8.

In 1876, the world's first artificial ice rink, the Glaciarium, opened just off King's Road, and later that year it relocated to a building on the street.

King's Road was home in the 1960s to the Chelsea Drugstore (originally a chemist with a stylised chrome-and-neon soda fountain upstairs, later a public house, and more recently a McDonalds), and in the 1970s to Malcolm McLaren's boutique, Let It Rock, which was renamed SEX in 1974, and then Seditionaries in 1977. During the hippie and punk eras, it was a centre for counterculture, but has since been gentrified. It serves as Chelsea's high street and has a reputation for being one of London's most fashionable shopping streets. Other celebrated boutiques included Granny Takes a Trip The Sweet Shop in Blantyre Street just off King's road at World's End and Stop The Shop, a fashion boutique with a revolving floor.

484 King's Road was headquarters of Swan Song Records, owned by Led Zeppelin. They left following closure of the company in 1983. King's Road was site of the first UK branch of Starbucks which opened in 1999.

The road has been represented in popular culture on various occasions: "King's Road" is the title of a song by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers from the 1981 album Hard Promises and Ian Fleming's James Bond lived in a trendy unnamed square just off King's Road.






Chester Square


Google Street View of Chester Square

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Location: Chester Square, Kensington and Chelsea, London, England, United Kingdom. (51°2943N 0°859W).

Chester Square
Chester Square is a small, residential garden square located in London's Belgravia district. Along with its sister squares Belgrave Square and Eaton Square, it is one of the three garden squares built by the Grosvenor family when they developed the main part of Belgravia in the 19th century. Chester Square is named after the city of Chester, near to which Eaton Hall – the ancestral home of the Grosvenor family – is situated.

History of Chester Square:
Roman Abramovich, Russian oligarch, second-richest person in the United Kingdom and owner of Chelsea FC.
Margaret Thatcher, former British Conservative Prime Minister lived at No. 73 until her death in 2013.
HM Queen Wilhemina of the Netherlands, Monarch of the Netherlands, had her headquarters at Number 77 during World War II.
Matthew Arnold, 1822–1888, poet and critic.
Yehudi Menuhin, Baron Menuhin, 1916–1999, American born violinist and conductor.
Mary Shelley, author of Frankenstein, lived at No. 24 from 1846 to her death in 1851.
Tony Curtis had a house when he was filming The Persuaders!
Blake Edwards and Julie Andrews lived here for a few years in the early 1970s after their departure from Hollywood
Mick Jagger and Marianne Faithfull lived here in 1966-67.
Nigella Lawson celebrity chef and food writer. Daughter of former Conservative Cabinet Minister, Lord Lawson
Sir John Liddell, physician and director-general of the Royal Navy medical department lived at No. 72 until his death in 1868.






Cadogan Square


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Location: Cadogan Square, Kensington and Chelsea, London, England, United Kingdom. (51°2943N 0°0938W).

Cadogan Square
Cadogan Square is a residential square in Knightsbridge named after Earl Cadogan (pronounced "Caduggan"). A few of the properties are used for diplomatic and educational purposes.

History of Cadogan Square:
The square was built between 1877 and 1888. The west side has the greatest variety of houses, all variations on the same Flemish-influenced theme. Numbers 54-58 were designed by William Young in 1877 for Lord Cadogan, and architect J. J. Stevenson was largely responsible for the south side, built 1879-85. The east side was built 1879 by G. T. Robinson. Number 61 is an early example of high-class mansion flats, and number 61a was a studio-house for a Mr F. W. Lawson.






Belgrave Square


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Location: Belgrave Square, Kensington and Chelsea, London, England, United Kingdom. (51.499°N 0.1537°W).

Belgrave Square
Belgrave Square is one of the grandest and largest 19th-century squares in London, England. It is the centrepiece of Belgravia, and was laid out by the property contractor Thomas Cubitt for the 2nd Earl Grosvenor, later the 1st Marquess of Westminster, in the 1820s. Most of the houses were occupied by 1840. The square takes its name from one of the Duke of Westminster's subsidiary titles, Viscount Belgrave. The village of Belgrave, Cheshire is two miles (3 km) from the Grosvenor family's main country seat of Eaton Hall.

History of Belgrave Square:
The original scheme consisted of four terraces, each made up of eleven grand white stuccoed houses, apart from the south east terrace, which has twelve; detached mansions in three of the corners; and a private central garden. The numbering is anticlockwise from the north: NW terrace Nos. 1 to 11; west corner mansion No. 12; SW terrace 13-23; south corner mansion No. 24; SE terrace Nos. 25-36; east corner mansion No. 37; NE terrace Nos. 38-48. There is also slightly later detached house at the northern corner, No. 49, which was built in by Cubitt for Sidney Herbert[disambiguation needed] in 1851. The terraces were designed by George Basevi and are possibly the grandest houses ever built in London on a speculative basis. The largest of the corner mansions, Seaford House in the east corner, was designed by Philip Hardwick, and the one in the west corner was designed by Robert Smirke. The square features statues of Christopher Columbus, Simón Bolívar, José de San Martín, Prince Henry the Navigator, and the 1st Marquess of Westminster, a bust of George Basevi, and a sculpture entitled Homage to Leonardo, the Vitruvian Man, by Italian sculptor Enzo Plazzotta.

From its construction until World War II, the square was occupied by leading members of the British aristocracy, with an increasing number of plutocrats added to the mix in later decades. Its immediate success was encapsulated by the decision of another of London's leading freehold landlords, the Duke of Bedford, to choose No. 6 as his London home in preference to a house on his own London estate in Bloomsbury, which had lost its aristocratic cachet.

During World War II, it was used as a tank park. The square has been a favoured location for embassies since the nineteenth century, and houses several to this day, including the German Embassy, which occupies three houses on the west side. After World War II, most of the houses were converted into offices for charities and institutes. This is now being reversed, with leases of three houses being offered for sale and conversion to residential use by the Grosvenor Estate in 2004. The present Duke of Westminster remains the freeholder of the square.