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CHELSEA SQUARE area information
CHELSEA SQUARE
CHELSEA SQUARE used to be the smart bohemian part of LONDON. This tradition
stretched back to the Victorian artists whose studios still exist
in Tite Street and other roads off the Embankment and was carried
on into the 20th-century when the Kings Road became the centre of
sixties swinging LONDON. While the atmosphere is more quirky than
perhaps Kensington, the price of property across CHELSEA SQUARE means that
very few artists or musicians can afford to live there unless they
are called Madonna.
Smart shops, restaurants, art galleries, the King's Road and a waterfront
location. Don't bother searching for a bargain, they're long gone
as every inch of CHELSEA SQUARE is pricey and now the domain of bankers,
lawyers and city types. Less starchy than Kensington, CHELSEA SQUARE provides
an east-west strip of some of LONDON's most desirable real estate.
Redbrick mansion blocks housing imposing flats surround Sloane Square
and Pont Street whilst to the west, small but pricey Victorian terraces
can be found off the King's Road. North of the King's Road offers
larger family homes with more regal properties fringing the Royal
Hospital. Even properties which lie in the shadow of the Worlds
End council estate in West CHELSEA SQUARE now command a high price.
The arterial Road is the Kings Road which like its counterpart to
the north, the Fulham Road is always busy. The top end of the Kings
Road around Sloane Square is dominated by the Cadogan estate which
owns most of the property from the Kings Road up Sloane Street.
This is always been a traditionally smart part of LONDON with the
occupants of the houses and flats around Sloane Square shopping
in Peter Jones. The middle section of the Kings Road down to Old
Church Street contains the now traditional series of small boutiques
selling frocks and cowboy boots. There has been something of the
renaissance in the area beyond old Church Street which was known
as World's End. This has centred round the Bluebird which is a mixture
of delicatessen and restaurant developed by Conran. This bit of
the Kings Road is now a rival for the stretch of the Fulham Road
running from the cinema to the CHELSEA SQUARE and Westminster hospital
which is known locally as 'the beach' it contains dozens
of restaurants and bars.
Communications are good nearer Sloane Square and
South Kensington where there are tube stations but get considerably
worse the further down the Fulham Road or the Kings Road that you
go. Both roads suffer from being main arterial roads into Fulham.
For
further LONDON area information - please
scroll down the page to find out area information about some of
the most sought locations in LONDON
Barnes
Tucked away on the south banks of the Thames and with the green
open spaces of Barnes common to help shield its residents from the
hustle and bustle of Putney and Wandsworth, Barnes has a retained
a unique village character. Secluded from LONDON's bustle, yet with
trendy Fulham and Putney on its doorstep, Barnes remains a much
sought after location boasting many large family homes and now City
money has pushed up prices beyond those of Putney and Wandsworth.
Handsome Victorian houses surround the Common and both Castelnau
and Lonsdale Roads to the north of the High Street. Smaller Victorian
cottages and terraces can be found off the high street itself, whilst
grand regency properties overlook the Thames. A new suburb called
Barnes Waterside boast classy flats and imposing villas, whilst
ex-council houses and mansion flats in North Barnes offer cheaper
prices. Local pubs and intimate restaurants reflect the cosseted
village feel.
The village itself is a tight network of roads, centred around the
duck pond, with Victorian red brick terraces, intermingled with
streets such as Hillersdon Avenue and Laurel Road, with larger 5/6
bedroom houses . Prices range from £850,000 to £3 million.
The major portion of Barnes comprises Edwardian
housing on square plots of land giving good lateral space and
off-street parking for between £850,000 and £1.5 million.
The most popular houses in Barnes continue to be the large villas
along Castelnau and Londsdale Road which range from 3,000 to 7,000
square feet. Most have off-street parking and some large gardens
overlook the 105 acres of wetland that is now a nature reserve
in the middle of LONDON. The downside is that this is the main
route from the A3 over Hammersmith Bridge to the A4, so road noise
is an issue. Prices start at £1.75 million through to £3
million +.
The Schools within Barnes itself are St Paul's,
Collet Court and the Harrodian, the latter being mixed. Barnes
is also home to the Swedish school - a huge influence on the rental
market.
Access by road to Kensington and Knightsbridge
is surprisingly easy from Barnes, providing Hammersmith Bridge
remains open. Mainline stations are at Barnes Common and Barnes
Bridge to Waterloo. The nearest Tube is quite a distance away
in Hammersmith and aircraft noise is a problem.
Battersea
Wandsworth's most fashionable address. Once strictly a working
class suburb with a rough reputation, Battersea has successfully
reinvented itself to true trendy status in just a generation.
Riverside warehouses have given way to plush, modern apartments
with great views and serious prices to match. Inland, Victorian
terraces predominate as well ex-council blocks, largely bought
up by their residents under the right-to-buy schemes of the Tory's
and who have now laughed all the way to the bank. Elegant mansion
blocks overlook Battersea Park, whilst roads off Lavender Hill
offer larger Victorian semis. Battersea Village boasts the obligatory
clutch of smart bars and restaurants. No tube, and traffic is
appalling but Clapham Junction provides train services to most
destinations required and residents can always resort to a quick
stroll over one of the three bridges into neighbouring CHELSEA SQUARE
across the river.
Bayswater
Bayswater is a part of LONDON that should be smarter than it is.
It lines the whole length of the north side of Kensington Gardens
and Hyde Park and has some wonderful squares and streets
architecturally a match for anything in Kensington.
Its problem is cheap hotels. Like another area
similarly afflicted, Pimlico, this brings with it cheap tourist
shops and cafes and, like Pimlico, this has meant it has been an
up-and-coming area for a very long time. Having said this, there
are pockets of quiet streets and squares which are now becoming
as popular (and expensive) as CHELSEA SQUARE and Notting Hill Gate.
Like Pimlico again, it has at its centre a mainline
station, Paddington, which has caused many of its problems. This
may be about to change with the new development of Paddington basin.
This thirty six acre site is going to be the biggest regeneration
in Central LONDON for decades and with the new residential developments
and office buildings it is likely that much of the benefit will
spread out into the surrounding areas.
While LONDON in general is now a cosmopolitan
city, Bayswater is particularly so. Around Queensway can be heard
just about any language and there is hardly an ethnic cuisine that
is not represented. Towards the eastern end, next door to the Edgware
Road, is particularly popular with Middle Eastern buyers and the
shops and restaurants are representative of this.
Communications are superb with buses up and down
the Bayswater Road into the West End and the Central, District and
Circle lines connecting it with the City. The Heathrow Express runs
out of Paddington and takes 15 minutes.
Belgravia
LONDON's most exclusive location and home to the very wealthy. Owned
virtually outright by the Grosvenor Estate since its construction
around 1840, freeholds are rare and building regulations strict.
Eaton and Chester Square boast grand, white stucco terraces and
houses, whilst the elegant homes of Belgrave Square remain the domain
of embassies. Charming converted-stable mews homes in cobbled cul-de-sacs
lie tucked away from view. Property is very expensive, although
the length of lease remaining influences prices enormously.
Belgravia is still the smartest area of LONDON. It is mainly owned
by the Grosvenor Estate which, unlike some other estates in LONDON,
maintains a constructive and businesslike relationship with their
tenants, allied with efficient and effective estate management.
The results of this can be seen in the uniformity of Eaton Square
which means that property there nearly always sells at a premium
to anywhere else in LONDON.
While Eaton Square is the core of Belgravia the
streets surrounding it are perennially expensive and popular. This
tends to tail off slightly to the northeast in the streets running
up to the boundary road with Buckingham Palace which have a higher
office content and a paucity of shops, restaurants and cafes. For
these amenities many prefer to be nearer Sloane Street where the
area around Mossop Street has a more village-like atmosphere. The
same applies to the south of Belgravia around Elizabeth Street.
There is a huge variation in the length of leases
across Belgravia. It is nearly always possible to extend leases
with the consent of the Grosvenor estate but expert advice is needed
to negotiate the right terms.
Communications are reasonable with Sloane Square,
Knightsbridge, Hyde Park Corner and Victoria Underground stations
within walking distance.
Belsize Park
Very pretty with exclusivity to match. Four and five-storey white
stucco Victorian houses can be found in plentiful supply, yet those
in Primrose Hill tend to be better looked after and less likely
to be converted into flats. Chalcot Square provides the areas most
sought after address with its pretty multicoloured houses and community
feel. Belsize Park offers larger redbrick mansion blocks with spacious
two and three bedroom apartments as well as a number of pretty mews
cottages. A real celebrity hotspot which has helped to change this
perception and Belsize Park is now as fashionable an area as Hampstead.
The local architecture is largely white stucco-fronted
Victorian houses, many of which have been converted into flats.
Originally sold on leases from the Church Commissioners, the move
to enfranchise originally started in the 1970's by BUTA (Belsize
United Tenants Association) is now complete and there are
very few properties still held on short leases.
Belsize Park (as opposed to Belsize Village) is
centred about the underground station on Haverstock Hill and features
the Screen on the Hill Cinema and a Waitrose as well as a good selection
of delicatessens and smart bars. Belsize Village on Belsize Lane
is quieter and prettier with a couple of restaurants, a wine merchants
and a pub at the centre.
One of the principal attractions of Belsize Park
is that during peak commuting times, it is 20 minutes closer by
car to central LONDON than Hampstead.
The Bishops Avenue
The Bishop's Avenue LONDON, N2 in the LONDON Borough of Barnet is
one of LONDON's most exclusive residential thoroughfares. It is
named after the Bishop's Wood, originally owned by the Bishop of
LONDON through which it runs. The Bishop's Avenue connects the north
side of Hampstead Heath at Kenwood (Hampstead Lane) to East Finchley
and is on the boundary of the Borough to the LONDON Borough of Haringey.
The road is a favourite with the international
ultra-rich and is often referred to by its nickname of "Millionaires'
Row" (although recently, it has been referred to as "Billionaire's
Row" in keeping with inflation), and each property occupies
a 2-3 acre plot, which is relatively palatial for LONDON. During
the mid 1990s, the street came to resemble a building site with
many of the original houses being re-built. Properties on the street
now have a vast array of individualistic architectural styles.
Property prices on the street sailed past the
£1 million mark in the late 1980s, with house prices now typically
starting from about £5,000,000 ($9,497,759 USD), with no upper
bound. Currently Turkish tycoon Halis Toprak's 30,000 sq ft home,
styled around a Greek temple, is for sale at £50 million ($94
million USD), making it one of the most expensive houses in the
world, as listed by Forbes magazine.
Amongst the road's rich and famous residents are
the Saudi Royal Family, whose LONDON residence is situated there,
although details of other residents and their addresses are kept
relatively sketchy. Construction is constantly underway on The Bishops
Avenue and prospective residents will purchase large properties
as they become available, only to flatten them and construct their
own from scratch. Another practice is to purchase any available
property on the road, with the intention of moving to another non-available
site, and to subsequently move when the more desired plot becomes
available; however, there has been some recent press attention into
whether the Bishop's Avenue has entered something of a decline.
This has been mainly attributed to the fact that the road often
appears to be very 'dead', because many of the residences do not
appear to be primary residences, with the owners often residing
abroad. Property switches hands frequently between the road's existing
residents, and prominent corner positions are popular, as are some
of the sites which are completely concealed from the road with gardens.
The Avenue is noted for the number of entrepreneurs
and tycoons residents on it - the sudden influx of self-made billionaires
(as opposed to aristocracy) is a recent phenomenon in LONDON, and
the Avenue is therefore markedly different to the highly exclusive
but much more subtle and subdued character of areas such as Belgravia
or Mayfair.
The fairly lax planning regulations on the road
have resulted in some astonishing, and certainly unconventional,
constructions as residents vie for attention and prestige. The exact
details of properties on the avenue are not readily available although
it appears that swimming pools, tennis courts, elevators and even
private bowling alleys are popular.
The designs of some of the houses, nearly all
of which are surrounded by high fences and security gates, have
been criticized by various local and council groups although the
wealthy residents, with the enormous houses eligible to very heavy
taxation, usually gain planning permission from the local council,
and some would argue that given the developments which have been
allowed to take place, the architectural blend of questionable taste
has become the avenue's signature style and it would therefore be
pointless to try and restrain or restrict future development.
Famous residents:
Dame Gracie Fields
Lakshmi Mittal
Billy Butlin
Saudi Royal Family
Bloomsbury
LONDON's new trend towards central living prompted by government
pressure to restrict building on greenfield sites surrounding the
capital has benefited both areas enormously. Houses are very rare
and are snatched up by those in the know before ever hitting the
open market. Flats are mostly converted office blocks or Georgian
terraces prevalent around the Grays Inn Road and the LONDON University.
Flats above shops and restaurants are also available, as are ex-council
blocks. Fitzrovia, a bussing enclave of Victorian and Georgian properties
around Charlotte Street and Fitzroy Street is enormously popular
and hence sought after.
Bushy Park
The vast expanse of Bushy Park (1,099 acres), makes it the second
largest Royal Park in LONDON. With the famous Diana Fountain forming
the centrepiece to the equally famous Chestnut Avenue, many people
think they know the park. However, it retains secret areas, there
for the visitor to discover and enjoy.
Bushy Park is simply a wonderful place to get outside, walk away
an afternoon and watch the sun slide spectacularly behind the horizon.
The parks most notable feature is Chestnut Avenue; the mile
long thoroughfare designed by Sir Christopher Wren is flanked on
either side by majestic rows of horse chestnut trees and leads to
the majestic Diana Fountain. Anglers can try their luck in the three
ponds and there are facilities for a host of other sports including
rugby, football, horse-riding and hockey. Formal plantations of
trees mingle with wildlife conservation areas and big mounds of
bracken hiding herds of deer.
Combine a walk in the park with a visit to Hampton
Court. Leave the palace by the Lion Gate, stop off for a refreshing
pint in the Kings Arms pub just outside before you cross the
road and enter the park via the Hampton Court Gate. Walk towards
Hampton Wick and take the train back from there.
Cadogan Place
Cadogan Place is in the heart of Knightsbridge - a central convenient
location for work and leisure. The A4 is within easy reach providing
access to the west and public transport links are also superb, with
Underground stations and Bus links in all directions to Heathrow
Airport, the West End, the City and Canary Wharf. Alternatively
there are plentiful LONDON taxis.
Grand and prestigious, Knightsbridge, located between Hyde Park
and CHELSEA SQUARE, should never be considered by those with shallow pockets.
Best known for its famous shops and department stores like Harrods,
houses are rare and most accommodation comprises of large flats
and plush, serviced apartments. Elegant red brick mansion blocks
overlooking Sloane Street, Hyde Park or one of the many garden squares
prove very sought after. Brompton Square and Egerton Crescent boasting
a number of elegant houses and pretty mews cottages, can be found
west towards South Kensington or to the South and CHELSEA SQUARE. Knightsbridge
is another favoured location of embassies. Property is very expensive,
although the length of lease remaining influences prices enormously.
Campden Hill
Extremely busy on a Saturday as the world famous market attracts
its usual mixture of New Age, Grunge and tourists from all four
corners, yet behind the bustle lies many quiet leafy roads with
exceptional large family homes and conversions. A mixture of every
type of property from handsome Victorian houses in Gloucester Crescent
to Georgian terraces off Parkway and the council blocks of Mornington
Crescent. Prices vary widely depending on what street you are in
and the level of noise you can stand. Albert Street in Camden town
commands the highest premiums.
CHELSEA SQUARE
CHELSEA SQUARE used to be the smart bohemian part of LONDON. This tradition
stretched back to the Victorian artists whose studios still exist
in Tite Street and other roads off the Embankment and was carried
on into the 20th-century when the Kings Road became the centre of
sixties swinging LONDON. While the atmosphere is more quirky than
perhaps Kensington, the price of property across CHELSEA SQUARE means that
very few artists or musicians can afford to live there unless they
are called Madonna.
Smart shops, restaurants, art galleries, the King's Road and a waterfront
location. Don't bother searching for a bargain, they're long gone
as every inch of CHELSEA SQUARE is pricey and now the domain of bankers,
lawyers and city types. Less starchy than Kensington, CHELSEA SQUARE provides
an east-west strip of some of LONDON's most desirable real estate.
Redbrick mansion blocks housing imposing flats surround Sloane Square
and Pont Street whilst to the west, small but pricey Victorian terraces
can be found off the King's Road. North of the King's Road offers
larger family homes with more regal properties fringing the Royal
Hospital. Even properties which lie in the shadow of the Worlds
End council estate in West CHELSEA SQUARE now command a high price.
The arterial Road is the Kings Road which like its counterpart to
the north, the Fulham Road is always busy. The top end of the Kings
Road around Sloane Square is dominated by the Cadogan estate which
owns most of the property from the Kings Road up Sloane Street.
This is always been a traditionally smart part of LONDON with the
occupants of the houses and flats around Sloane Square shopping
in Peter Jones. The middle section of the Kings Road down to Old
Church Street contains the now traditional series of small boutiques
selling frocks and cowboy boots. There has been something of the
renaissance in the area beyond old Church Street which was known
as World's End. This has centred round the Bluebird which is a mixture
of delicatessen and restaurant developed by Conran. This bit of
the Kings Road is now a rival for the stretch of the Fulham Road
running from the cinema to the CHELSEA SQUARE and Westminster hospital
which is known locally as 'the beach' it contains dozens
of restaurants and bars.
Communications are good nearer Sloane Square and
South Kensington where there are tube stations but get considerably
worse the further down the Fulham Road or the Kings Road that you
go. Both roads suffer from being main arterial roads into Fulham.
Cheyne Walk
This is a terrific address. Cheyne Walk was, and still is, considered
to be the most fashionable road in CHELSEA SQUARE. This block of flats
is on the corner of Flood Street, once the home of Margaret Thatcher.
It is a short walk to the vibrant Kings Road and to the Sloane Square
underground station. There are frequent buses up and down the Kings
Road making it very easy to get around from here. The local shopping
and restaurants are second to none.
Chiswick
Chiswick has three main parts, one of which is physically divided
from the rest.
The core is around Chiswick High Road with its
shops and restaurants. It is very much a LONDON village with its
own distinctive flavour and local specialities. It is also sufficiently
far away from the river for the flight path into Heathrow not to
be too much of a problem.
The area between Chiswick High Road and the A4
is very typical of West LONDON with Edwardian streets of medium-sized
family houses of the type that is very common in Fulham. To the
north is Bedford Park which has a very distinctive feel due to its
arts and crafts Edwardian architecture which buyers tend to either
love or hate. This is an area of big houses and green spaces and
correspondingly high prices. Also to the south of the A4 is Grove
Park with earlier Victorian houses intermingled with houses built
in the 1950s and 1960s as a result of stray bomb-damage during the
war.
The real gem in Chiswick is Chiswick Mall, an
almost completely unspoiled terrace of Georgian houses with gardens
running down to the river and views over to Barnes and Hammersmith
Bridge. This is a real rus in urbe with an atmosphere that is almost
unique in LONDON. Beautiful and charming though it is it is completely
cut off from the rest of Chiswick by the huge arterial road that
is the A4. All access to it by car is via the Hogarth roundabout
and there are few shops of any description nearby. As the river
is the main flight path into Heathrow, aeroplanes can be a problem.
Communications by underground are good and the
A4 and the Hammersmith flyover means that, apart from at peak times,
road access is reasonable. Prices on Chiswick Mall and in Grove
Park are not much less than in Central LONDON.
Clapham
The new Fulham? Clapham's trendy young residents and middle class
families like to think so. In comparison to the rest of Lambeth,
Clapham stands out from the crowd. Good transport links into LONDON,
a vibrant supply of shops and restaurants and attractive Victorian
and Edwardian property creates an attractive cocktail for those
forced to look elsewhere by higher prices north of the river. Abbeville
Village in Clapham Park offers sought after Victorian terraces and
conversions whilst Clapham Common itself is overlooked by a stock
of fine Georgian townhouses. Old Town provides a pleasant mixture
of Georgian and Victorian terraces and mews as well as a number
of grander white stucco properties around Grafton Square.
Cottesmore Gardens
Grand-scale and spacious living is what people enjoy in this premier
residential area of Kensington W8, offering an abundance of imposing
frontages on quiet squares. A lot of the houses are extremely large
and even when they have been converted into flats, as many have
been; these Kensington apartments are still enormous. Kensington
is grand and spacious with Hyde Park, Kensington Gardens and Holland
Park to walk, jog or ride in.
Kensington is home to many excellent schools and public transport
runs very frequently through the wide main roads and there are several
Underground stations, which means commuting to the West End and
the City is very simple. Taxis are also in abundance here too. Although
the rents are high in this area, expense is spared on long commuter
journeys.
There are many different types of properties that sit amongst each
other in Kensington. Modern developments and mansion blocks are
situated next to quaint shops, cosy pubs, cafés and restaurants.
Residential housing, including attractive cottages line many of
the roads and you will also find that some of the properties have
extremely well maintained front gardens.
In Kensington you are within easy reach of escapism, as two of LONDON's
most adored open spaces, Holland Park and Kensington Palace Gardens
are within easy reach. Unfortunately during the war, Holland House
was bombed. In 1952 the LONDON County Council bought the land and
since then it has been enjoyed by vasts amounts of people. Most
of the gardens have remained including the Rose Garden, the Dutch
Garden and the Italian Garden. In 1991, the Kyoto Japanese Garden
also came on the scene.
Public transport feeds Kensington very well. If you fly regularly
transport to either Heathrow or Gatwick is simple. For Heathrow
Airport take the Underground to Earls Court along the District Line,
change at Earls Court and take the Piccadilly Line to Heathrow.
To get to Gatwick Airport, take either the District or Circle line
tube to Victoria Station and then the Gatwick Express (train) into
Gatwick.
Covent Gardens
A lively mix of restaurants, shops, clubs and theatres that prove
an ever popular attraction for hoards of tourists, Covent Garden
has grown out of all recognition from its old days as LONDON's fruit-and-veg
market back in the seventies. Space is at a premium so accommodation
comprises mainly of flats and maisonettes above shops and restaurants.
Houses are very rare and the lack of gardens increases the desirability
for a roof garden or balcony on any property. Noise and congestion
is inevitable and parking unrealistic.
This area is in the immediate vicinity of the old flower market,
the shopping area around Seven Dials and the Royal Opera House.
It is close to theatreland and the nearest mainline railway station
is Charing Cross, which services Kent and Sussex. Charing Cross
Road, the Strand, Oxford Street and Kingsway border the area.
To the west is Soho well-known for its
bars, restaurants and late-night clubs. Bloomsbury to the north
includes several colleges and teaching hospitals as well as the
British Museum, and Holborn to the east is dominated by the Law
Courts and legal chambers.
Around the Piazza of the old flower market, it
is mainly commercial and retail but there are a number of blocks
that have recently been refurbished for residential use. These provide
large, light and unusual spaces, some loft style and some straightforward
flats.
Seven Dials is all retail but above the small
shops, there are flats. However, the streets are narrow and, although
the area has an 'old-English' feel, this means the flats are usually
dark and overlooked.
To the east of the Opera House is mainly old warehouses
and small factory buildings that have been converted to loft-style
apartments and a large amount of council accommodation.
With its bars, restaurants and theatres, Covent
Garden is busy almost twenty-four hours a day, and it is extremely
bad for parking. But for those who wish to immerse themselves into
LONDON life, it is almost unsurpassable. However, the downside is
that there may be drunks and drug addicts on your doorstep.
Curzon Street
Curzon Street is located in the heart of Mayfair and within minutes
walk to Green Park tube station, Green Park and Hyde Park.
Solid, respectable haunts of the wealthy. Located between both Hyde
and Regents Parks and on the doorstop of the West End's sights and
attractions, Mayfair and St. James's have remained the desired location
of rich bankers, embassy staff and wealthy internationals for generations.
Large red brick, Georgian and Victorian mansions provide grand,
serviced flats and apartments in Mayfair. Shepherds Market to the
south has a number of small cottages and mews properties. St. James's
boasts a number of substantial, smart homes although much of its
property is now used as offices. The Jubilee Line service to Docklands
has attracted young bankers looking for flats to rent. Much of the
area is owned by the Grosvenor Estate and hence long leases are
rare.
Docklands
Considered a vast white elephant in the early 1990's, Docklands
is now heralded as a great success and its influence can be felt
across Tower Hamlets. With its three gleaming towers expected to
triple the working population of the area over the next few years
and the Jubilee Line finally in place, past teething problems of
unfilled offices space, lack of transport and no shops, have long
since faded into Docklands history.
Stretching from Tower Bridge, Wapping and Limehouse
along the Thames dockside in the south, to the true East End haunts
of Bow, Stepney and Bethnal Green in the north, Tower Hamlets is
a borough of extremes. Banking and IT wealth dominates Docklands,
whilst some of the worse LONDON council estates lie only a few miles
north, a reminder of the borough's past decay. Regeneration is still
the buzzword and as the trend for urban living continues to grow
amongst the well paid bankers and IT staff who populate the shiny
new riverside office blocks, Tower Hamlets will continue to successfully
reinvent itself.
A vast swathe of modern apartments, converted warehouses and town
houses. Regenerated from its previous derelict state over the past
decade, The Isle of Dogs remains somewhat isolated from the rest
of Docklands and a little soulless. Unlike neighbouring Wapping,
the Island, as it is known locally, remains vulnerable to market
downturns due to its location on the fringe. Prices are highest
for the newest developments and properties with river views.
Spitalfields and Whitechapel provide a lively and cosmopolitan corner
of LONDON. Commercial and residential buildings stand side by side
in an area of LONDON renowned for its wholesale rag trade and buzzing
Asian Community. Houses rarely come on the market and are snatched
up quickly by developers in the know. Streets off the famous Brick
Lane, boast tall Georgian town houses and a location close to the
best curry houses in LONDON. New developments and warehouse shells
are readily available, many now being touted as live / work units.
Wapping & limehouse are the birthplace of LONDON's warehouse
conversion trend and location for the first apartment blocks to
house Docklands new wealthy workers in the late 1980's. Now grown
up from its early days as a building site and home to a vast number
of plush apartments and luxury flats. Wapping is more expensive
than Limehouse due to its closer location to the City. The Limehouse
Basin is still largely a construction site with new developments
rising up every week. Inland from the dockside, small enclaves of
Victorian and Edwardian terraces still survive as well as a number
of council blocks.
Eaton Square
Owned virtually outright by the Grosvenor Estate since its construction
around 1840, freeholds are rare and building regulations strict.
Eaton and Chester Square boast grand, white stucco terraces and
houses, whilst the elegant homes of Belgrave Square remain the domain
of embassies. Charming converted-stable mews homes in cobbled cul-de-sacs
lie tucked away from view. Property is very expensive, although
the length of lease remaining influences prices enormously.
Egerton Place
The western end of Knightsbridge includes Egerton Crescent, Terrace
and Gardens which, while always fashionable, has now become one
of the most expensive areas in LONDON; a roll-call of the residents
would include names familiar to regular readers of the FT. To the
east, Lowndes Square is equally expensive but most of its residents
are part-time occupiers. It is very popular with Asian and Middle
Eastern buyers in particular who like the portered blocks and the
easy access to the shopping.
Fulham
As an area Fulham has been lucky to have had some smart neighbours.
Being on the north side of the river and next to CHELSEA SQUARE it has
been the natural home for those who 30 years ago would have liked
to live in CHELSEA SQUARE but can no longer afford to do so.
There have always been those that have chosen
Fulham by choice because of the larger houses and particularly for
the Hurlingham club which forms a huge area of green in the middle
of Fulham. Membership is difficult but it is almost unique in LONDON
in being a country club within striking distance of the smartest
addresses.
There are two sides to Fulham. The biggest houses
and the greenest parks lie to the south of the New Kings Road on
the Peterborough estate. These are good-sized family houses clearly
built for the well-to-do middle-classes. To the north of Parsons
Green and of the Fulham Road was built for a more working-class
clientele though this changed radically during the 1980s
when professional classes took it over, introducing delicatessens
and wine bars.
The transport situation is not the best. The Wandsworth
Bridge Road, the New King's Road and the Fulham Road are all arterial
roads taking traffic from south of the river into central LONDON
and are nose-to-tail in the morning and evening. The tube is the
District line which goes through Earls Court adequate but
not ideal.
Prices have edged up considerably over the last
few years with houses on the Peterborough estate now selling for
well over £1 million.
Green Park
Green Park (officially The Green Park) is one of the Royal Parks
of LONDON. Covering an area of about 53 acres, it was originally
a swampy burial ground for lepers from the nearby hospital at Saint
James's. It was first enclosed in the 16th century by Henry VIII.
In 1668 Charles II made it a Royal Park, laying out the park's main
walks.
It lies between LONDON's Hyde Park and St. James's
Park. Together with Kensington Gardens and the gardens of Buckingham
Palace, these parks form an almost unbroken stretch of open land
reaching from Whitehall and Victoria station to Kensington and Notting
Hill.
By contrast with its neighbours, Green Park has
no lakes nor any statues or fountains (except for Canada Memorial
by Pierre Granche), but consists entirely of wooded meadows. The
park is bounded on the south by Constitution Hill, on the east by
the pedestrian Queen's Walk, and on the north by Piccadilly. It
meets St. James's Park at Queen's Gardens with the Victoria Memorial
at its centre, opposite the entrance to Buckingham Palace. To the
south is the ceremonial avenue of The Mall, and the buildings of
St James's Palace and Clarence House overlook the park to the east.
Green Park tube station is located on Piccadilly
near the north end of Queen's Walk.
Grosvenor Square
Grosvenor Square (pronounced "Grove-nuh Square") is a
large garden square in the exclusive Mayfair district of LONDON.
It is the centrepiece of the Mayfair property of the Dukes of Westminster,
and takes its name from their surname, "Grosvenor". Duke
Street forms the east side of the square.
Sir Richard Grosvenor obtained a licence to develop
Grosvenor Square and the surrounding streets in 1710.
Solid, respectable haunts of the wealthy. Located between both Hyde
and Regents Parks and on the doorstop of the West End's sights and
attractions, Mayfair and St. James's have remained the desired location
of rich bankers, embassy staff and wealthy internationals for generations.
Large red brick, Georgian and Victorian mansions provide grand,
serviced flats and apartments in Mayfair. Shepherds Market to the
south has a number of small cottages and mews properties. St. James's
boasts a number of substantial, smart homes although much of its
property is now used as offices. The Jubilee Line service to Docklands
has attracted young bankers looking for flats to rent. Much of the
area is owned by the Grosvenor Estate and hence long leases are
rare.
Mayfair has always been synonymous with smart LONDON. Its position
as the most expensive property on the Monopoly board has only added
to its cachet. The modern reality is slightly different as its nature
was changed by the wartime damage to the city which resulted in
many offices being relocated to the West End from which they have
never left. Added to this, during the oil boom of the 1970s,
many large apartments were bought by Middle Eastern buyers and they
tend to use them for short periods of the year only. The result
has been a retention of the outward smartness but a loss of street
life with the exception of the area around Shepherds
market.
Grove End Road
On the north border of E3 is Victoria Park. For the best views and
priciest properties you'll have to take a step into E9, where imposing
Victorian houses line Cadogen Terrace. South of the park there's
a lot of housing association activity, with smart new developments
and affordable flats and houses. The rejuvenated Bow Wharf carries
swish apartments whilst towards Grove Road, Chisenhale and Old Ford
Roads offer attractive three storey Victorian properties happily
backing onto the Hertford Union Canal. Chisenhale Road is also home
to one of LONDON's most innovative art galleries.
Smaller Victorian terraces and conversions fill
the roads south to the railway line. The school conversion at School
Bell Mews started something of a trend in the area, by annexing
workspace galleries onto the flats. Below the railway line, blue
period lampposts announce your arrival in Tredegar. Tredegar Square,
with its brick and white stucco Georgiana, is the gem of region.
Many houses have over 5 bedrooms, and are probably the most expensive
in this part of the Capital. Newer properties in streets surrounding
the square have plagiarised the style with reasonable success.
Grove Park Gardens
On the north border of E3 is Victoria Park. For the best views and
priciest properties you'll have to take a step into E9, where imposing
Victorian houses line Cadogen Terrace. South of the park there's
a lot of housing association activity, with smart new developments
and affordable flats and houses. The rejuvenated Bow Wharf carries
swish apartments whilst towards Grove Road, Chisenhale and Old Ford
Roads offer attractive three storey Victorian properties happily
backing onto the Hertford Union Canal. Chisenhale Road is also home
to one of LONDON's most innovative art galleries.
Smaller Victorian terraces and conversions fill
the roads south to the railway line. The school conversion at School
Bell Mews started something of a trend in the area, by annexing
workspace galleries onto the flats. Below the railway line, blue
period lampposts announce your arrival in Tredegar. Tredegar Square,
with its brick and white stucco Georgiana, is the gem of region.
Many houses have over 5 bedrooms, and are probably the most expensive
in this part of the Capital. Newer properties in streets surrounding
the square have plagiarised the style with reasonable success.
Hammersmith
Hammersmith is dominated by the traffic vortex, Hammersmith Broadway,
with three major roads and three tube lines travelling through the
middle of it. The result is that there are several major global
headquarters there including Coca Cola and Disney.
From a residential point of view, Hammersmith
is really a collection of smaller neighbourhoods which vary in price
and style of house. Along the river, towards Chiswick Mall, are
Georgian houses looking over Barnes . Once you cross over the A4
and beyond King Street (the main shopping street in Hammersmith)
it is dotted with properties from the 1820s notably St Peters Square,
with its 5/6 bedroom stucco fronted houses over the garden square.
To the north is Ravenscourt Park which, along with the area the
estate agents like to call Brackenbury Village , backs on to Shepherds
Bush, its less prepossessing neighbour.
For larger houses closer to Kensington there is
Brook Green which represents good value compared with its smarter
neighbour with large detached villas of 4000 sq ft selling for less
than £2 million.
Transport is generally good either by road or
tube with the choice of District, Piccadilly and Hammersmith and
City tube lines. Hammersmith lies astride the A4, the main arterial
road to the west which makes Heathrow easy though the general gridlock
afflicting LONDON as a whole often feels like it is focussed on
that road.
Hampstead
Don't expect any bargains! Hampstead, the home of the rich and "I've
made it class" has a price range to match its glossy image.
Home of pop stars, media moguls and the generally super wealthy,
Hampstead's price range achieved a heady orbit in the mid-Eighties
and has shown little sign of re-entry since. Active community organisations
fiercely defend and uphold the village and heath from unwanted developers,
although McDonalds scored a notable victory a few years back. Property
is very mixed yet demand always out strips supply. Modest Victorian
terraces can be found to the south of the heath whilst large mansion
blocks, many converted into apartments, over look the parkland.
The bulk of Hampstead Village is made up of largely Georgian and
Victorian houses, sandwiched between Fitzjohn Avenue and East Heath
Road which are the main roads running in and out of LONDON. The
principal local landowners the Church Commissioners, Maryan Wilson
Estate and the Hampstead Wells and Campden Trust had largely sold
their holdings by the beginning of the 1990's, and freeholds or
long leaseholds are now the norm. Hampstead High Street still has
"useful" shops such as greengrocers and fishmongers as
well as the usual boutiques. The Everyman Cinema has at last been
refurbished and still shows an eclectic selection of art-house movies
as well as mainstream films.
Hampstead Heath
Hampstead Heath is a 791 acre park four miles from the centre of
LONDON. The Heath is made up of the grounds of several houses that
formerly occupied the area.
Parliament Hill offers fantastic views of LONDON
and the surrounding countryside. Parliament Hill takes its name
from one of two origins. Some believe that Guy Fawkes and his fellow
conspirators stood upon the hill looking towards parliament waiting
for it to explode. A more likely explanation is that Parliament
Hill was a point of defence during the English Civil War for troops
loyal to parliament. Open-air concerts are held on Parliament Hill
during summer months. It is also believed that Boudiccia was buried
nearby.
Golders Hill Park is home to an animal sanctuary
where visitors can get close to deer and native birds. There are
childrens events and live concerts held here during summer.
To the North of Hampstead Heath is Kenwood House-
a neo-classical mansion built in the early seventeenth century.
The house is now owned by English Heritage and houses one of the
most valuable and rare collections of paintings owned by the nation.
Hampstead Heath boasts a racecourse, adventure
playground and is home to a flock of Flamingos. The Heath is extremely
popular with LONDONers- its magnificent views draw cyclists, sunbathers
and bowlers. Hampstead Heath is a hive of activity during the summer
due to live music events and entertainers catering for every conceivable
taste.
Hampstead Garden Suburb
The Hampstead Garden Suburb lies between Hampstead and Highgate,
just to the North of the Heath and only another half a mile further
out of LONDON. But in this instance, half a mile makes all the difference
and the Garden Suburb represents a different style of living. Laid
out to a Lutyens design, the houses are predominantly low-built
and arts and crafts in style, with off-street parking and good sized
gardens.
The price of more suburban living is a shortage
of amenities. All shopping has to be done by car. The Bishops Avenue
is probably the best known road in North LONDON flanked with mansions
that seem to be immune from any local planning regulations.
Henrietta Barnet School for Girls regularly heads
the National League Tables.
Highgate
Highgate faces Hampstead over the Heath and, like Hampstead, features
predominantly Georgian and Victorian architecture.
Less fashionable than Hampstead and without an
underground station at its centre, Highgate is up to 20% cheaper
than Hampstead and has retained more of its old world charm.
A quintessential and quirky English village which
centres about Pond Square where, after years of living with the
smell of stagnant water, the residents finally filled in the eponymous
pond. There is now a campaign to re-instate it.
Highgate is also well served for schools, most
notably by Highgate School (for boys) and Channing School (for girls)
as well as a good selection of state schools.
Commuting to central LONDON by car is slow with
Highgate West Hill and Highgate Hill the only two roads into town.
School run traffic only exacerbates this problem.
Holland Park
It is hard to believe that the houses in Holland Park, which now
sell for more than £10 million, were only forty years ago
part of the infamous Rackman empire an area of squalid bedsits.
It now contains some of the most expensive property in LONDON.
The park itself is one of the most rural in LONDON
quite unlike the wide open spaces of Hyde Park, it has some
dense woodland where it is hard to believe that you are in the middle
of LONDON. The Belvedere, which is the remains of the old Holland
House, sits in the middle and is the home in the summer to enthusiastic
open-air operas. Dogs have to be walked on a lead which is not so
good for dog owners but rather better for children.
The area to the west of the park is mainly owned
by the Illchester estate but, with the advent of the Leasehold Enfranchisement
Act, the grip of the estate is rather less than it used to be. There
are modern (post war) developments all along that side of the park
varying from Illchester Terrace with its grand detached houses,
through the Abbotsbury's which are rather smaller, to Woodsford
Square where the architecture falls well short of the location which
shows in the prices which are significantly less than anywhere around
it.
Both alongside Holland Park to the north and in
Addison Road there are some of the biggest houses in Central LONDON.
Most of these are well over 10,000 sq ft, detached and with large
gardens. On the other side of Holland Park Avenue are rather smaller
houses but many of them back onto communal gardens for family life
in central LONDON it doesn't get much better.
Being primarily a residential area, the shops
tend to be of the local variety rather than the big chains. Most
are on Holland Park Avenue and include what must be among the best
butchers and cheese-shops in LONDON, Lidgates and Jeraboams.
Transport is good with a straight road from Holland
Park Avenue, into Bayswater and then into Oxford Street which
takes buses directly into the West End. The Central Line, following
this same route, continues on into the City which is yet
another reason why it is so popular with investment bankers.
Hyde Park
Grand and prestigious, Knightsbridge, located between Hyde Park
and CHELSEA SQUARE, should never be considered by those with shallow pockets.
Best known for its famous shops and department stores like Harrods,
houses are rare and most accommodation comprises of large flats
and plush, serviced apartments. Elegant red brick mansion blocks
overlooking Sloane Street, Hyde Park or one of the many garden squares
prove very sought after. Brompton Square and Egerton Crescent boasting
a number of elegant houses and pretty mews cottages, can be found
west towards South Kensington or to the South and CHELSEA SQUARE. Knightsbridge
is another favoured location of embassies. Property is very expensive,
although the length of lease remaining influences prices enormously.
Islington
Favoured location of LONDON's hip and trendy set, Islington took
its time to transform from 1960's run down borough to icon of New
Labour hipness and sought after location for City and West End workers.
Nowadays, Islington is immediately associated with the super-hip
Upper Street with its trendy bars and restaurants and the wealth
of fine Georgian and Victorian houses available. Many areas have
succumbed to the nouveaux riche set, but not all of Islington is
smart and glamorous.
As well as the obligatory quota of trendy bars
and restaurants, there is the Screen on the Green cinema, a number
of fringe theatres - including the Almedia and the famous Little
Angel Marionette Theatre. Thus Islington stands as a quite self-sufficient
village in its own right with a full compliment of "useful"
shops such as hardware stores, fishmongers and grocers, augmenting
boutiques and Camden Passage Antiques Market.
There is, however, a comparative lack of schools.
Clerkenwell to the south of the borough epitomises LONDON's modern
trend for warehouse living whilst further north the council blocks
of Finsbury and the boarders with King's Cross serves to remind
that not all the borough is affluent. Barnsbury, Canonbury and Highbury
lie to the north of Islington and boast many elegant squares and
terraces. Archway offers roads of densely packed Victorian terraces
whilst Tufnell Park to the west has become a hot spot for those
forced out by Islington's high prices.
Justice Walk
Justice Walk is situated in Kensington and CHELSEA SQUARE.
CHELSEA SQUARE used to be the smart bohemian part of LONDON. This tradition
stretched back to the Victorian artists whose studios still exist
in Tite Street and other roads off the Embankment and was carried
on into the 20th-century when the Kings Road became the centre of
sixties swinging LONDON. While the atmosphere is more quirky than
perhaps Kensington, the price of property across CHELSEA SQUARE means that
very few artists or musicians can afford to live there unless they
are called Madonna.
Smart shops, restaurants, art galleries, the King's Road and a waterfront
location. Don't bother searching for a bargain, they're long gone
as every inch of CHELSEA SQUARE is pricey and now the domain of bankers,
lawyers and city types. Less starchy than Kensington, CHELSEA SQUARE provides
an east-west strip of some of LONDON's most desirable real estate.
Kensington
Kensington, as opposed to South Kensington which is the area south
of the Cromwell Road, or West Kensington which is west of Olympia,
is one of the most popular residential areas in LONDON. Families
particularly like it as the houses tend to be bigger than those
in CHELSEA SQUARE and the proximity of the parks of Kensington Gardens
and Holland Park make it ideal for children and dogs.
The biggest and most expensive houses are on the
Phillimore Estate which runs up the hill to the east of Holland
Park. These are, for the most part, large stuccoed houses with big
gardens. In the same area there are some large mansion blocks and
developments with parking, such as Campden Hill Court and Observatory
Gardens. The whole block between Kensington Church Street and Holland
Park is quiet and tree-lined with family-size houses now selling
for more than £3 million.
A varied mixture of mansion blocks boasting large flats and tall
white Victorian terraces providing grand family homes can be found
off Kensington High Street. Proximity to either Holland Park or
Kensington Gardens drives prices skyward. Substantial houses around
Holland Park, many of which have been converted into flats. Camden
Hill Square offers an attractive collection of Victorian terraces.
Lining Kensington Gardens is Kensington Palace
Gardens which is a private street of very large ambassadorial-sized
houses including Kensington Palace itself where most of the minor
royal family have flats and, of course, where Princess Diana lived.
Kensington High Street is functional but hardly
beautiful. It has most of the major retail names and is usually
extremely busy. This contrasts with Kensington Church Street which
is much more village-like, with antique shops, cafes and restaurants.
The area to the south of Kensington High Street
is a mixture of very high value houses such as in Cottesmore Gardens,
Victoria Road and Hyde Park Gate; large blocks of handsome red-brick
mansion blocks such as Iverna Gardens and Kensington Court; as well
as medium-sized family houses in pleasant streets such as Scarsdale
Villas or Abingdon Road. These houses now sell for around £2
million.
A perk of living in the Royal Borough of Kensington
and CHELSEA SQUARE is that your parking permit is not zoned enabling
you to park across the whole width of one of the best residential
areas in LONDON.
Kensington Gardens
Kensington Gardens adjoins Kensington Palace Gardens which is
a private street of very large ambassadorial-sized houses including
Kensington Palace itself where most of the minor royal family have
flats and, of course, where Princess Diana lived.
Kensington High Street is functional but hardly
beautiful. It has most of the major retail names and is usually
extremely busy. This contrasts with Kensington Church Street which
is much more village-like, with antique shops, cafes and restaurants.
The area to the south of Kensington High Street
is a mixture of very high value houses such as in Cottesmore Gardens,
Victoria Road and Hyde Park Gate; large blocks of handsome red-brick
mansion blocks such as Iverna Gardens and Kensington Court; as well
as medium-sized family houses in pleasant streets such as Scarsdale
Villas or Abingdon Road. These houses now sell for around £2
million.
A perk of living in the Royal Borough of Kensington
and CHELSEA SQUARE is that your parking permit is not zoned enabling
you to park across the whole width of one of the best residential
areas in LONDON.
Kew
Large Victorian family houses surround the roads opposite the famous
Royal Gardens. Large Victorian villas, smaller family houses and
a choice of spacious flat conversions and modern apartments can
be found around Kew Green at the northern tip of Kew Gardens. More
Edwardian houses mixed with modern blocks and some ex-council properties
are to be found to the east towards the Fulham Cemetery.
Kenwood
Kenwood is situated along the edges of Hampstead Heath. In North
LONDON this is THE place to get back to nature. Strewn with picnickers,
cyclists, families and the rest, the heath is large enough and has
enough copses, hills and mounds that a quiet spot is never far away.
'Chronicles of Narnia' author, CS Lewis, lived near Hampstead Heath
and local folklore asserts that it was its picturesque rises, ponds
and woodland glades which inspired his mystical land.
Hampstead Heath is renowned as a rich conservation area and parts
of it are designated as areas of scientific interest by English
Nature. Hoards flock to the refreshing waters of the Heath's celebrated
ponds in the summer months whilst in the colder months it's more
rewarding to while away an afternoon feeding the ducks or exploring
the lush woodland, bogs, hedgerows and grassland.
Along the edges of the heath a number of attractions will attempt
to lure you away. There's the lido at the south, Kenwood House at
the north, South End Green and Hampstead Village at the west, and
Highgate to the east. There are also plenty of pubs dotted around
the edge - the Spaniards Inn (Spaniards Road), the Holly Bush (22
Holly Mount) or the Freemason's Arms (32 Downshire Hill) are all
worthy of a visit.
The heath doesn't look quite as rural as when Constable painted
it, but nonetheless, it is as close to rural as you're going to
get in a capital city.
Kew Gardens
Large Victorian family houses surround the roads opposite the famous
Royal Gardens. Large Victorian villas, smaller family houses and
a choice of spacious flat conversions and modern apartments can
be found around Kew Green at the northern tip of Kew Gardens. More
Edwardian houses mixed with modern blocks and some ex-council properties
are to be found to the east towards the Fulham Cemetery.
Kingston Upon Thames
Home of the commuter and firmly suburban in character, Kingston
forms LONDON's most southwestern tip. Kingston itself dominates
the north of the borough whilst Surbiton to the south does not disappoint
in offering true commuter living. Chessington lies at the borough's
most southerly point before the open fields of Surrey take over
from LONDON's sprawl. Property is dominated by mid war terraces
and semis with some Victorian and Edwardian homes near the town
centres.
Knightsbridge
Grand and prestigious, Knightsbridge, located between Hyde Park
and CHELSEA SQUARE, should never be considered by those with shallow pockets.
Best known for its famous shops and department stores like Harrods,
houses are rare and most accommodation comprises of large flats
and plush, serviced apartments. Elegant red brick mansion blocks
overlooking Sloane Street, Hyde Park or one of the many garden squares
prove very sought after. Brompton Square and Egerton Crescent boasting
a number of elegant houses and pretty mews cottages, can be found
west towards South Kensington or to the South and CHELSEA SQUARE. Knightsbridge
is another favoured location of embassies. Property is very expensive,
although the length of lease remaining influences prices enormously.
Knightsbridge is a curiously difficult area to define; the boundaries
between it and South Kensington, CHELSEA SQUARE and Belgravia are hard
to place but in broad terms it is centred on Harrods, with Hyde
Park to the North, the Egertons to the west, Pont Street to the
south and Lowndes Square to the east.
A generation ago the area around Harrods was super-fashionable
with Harrods as the corner shop for its rich and aristocratic denzins.
The money hasn't gone but the possessors of it now tend to be more
international and only partially resident and Harrods is now the
haunt of tourists in search of brands. The crowds of shoppers in
Sloane Street and along Knightsbridge tends to make parking, walking
and shopping a daily trial if you live permanently close by.
The other side of Knightsbridge, the road, is
another story. Montpelier square, Ennismore Gardens and the small
streets and mews surrounding it are still some of the nicest parts
of central LONDON quiet and within walking distance of Hyde
Park but still close enough to the bustle if that is what you want.
The western end of Knightsbridge includes Egerton
Crescent, Terrace and Gardens which, while always fashionable, has
now become one of the most expensive areas in LONDON; a roll-call
of the residents would include names familiar to regular readers
of the FT. To the east, Lowndes Square is equally expensive but
most of its residents are part-time occupiers. It is very popular
with Asian and Middle Eastern buyers in particular who like the
portered blocks and the easy access to the shopping.
Transport is only quite good with just the Piccadilly
Line to choose from and notorious bottlenecks around the Scotch
House and by Hyde Park Corner.
Ladbroke Gardens/Grove
The Ladbroke Grove side of Notting Hill boasts the large Victorian
houses and leafy, peaceful private gardens and squares which the
film of the same name idealised. Most of the grand properties here
have survived being carved into conversions and flats.
If you want to live in Central LONDON and then family life does
not get any better than in a house with its own secure private park
shared with a few dozen like-minded people. As the Americans investment
bankers have discovered this over the last 15 years, prices for
these gems have rocketed. Where the general Central LONDON market
has doubled in the last seven years, houses on the communal gardens
have trebled.
Maida Vale
Remains highly sought after and commands prices to match desirability.
Maida Vale boasts a rich stock of flats, big and small, old and
new. Many of the large Victorian mansion blocks have sizable communal
gardens to the rear. Family houses are rare, although a small number
of mews properties are available. Little Venice remains one of LONDON's
hidden gems. Warwick Avenue, running north from Harrow Road across
the Regent's Canal, boasts large cream stucco and red brick mansion
blocks filled with grand, expensive conversions. Canal facing properties
are the most expensive.
It is hard to believe that in the 1980s the Church Commissioners,
who were the big local landowners, decided to sell their holdings
at seemingly any price. Local residents and developers alike were
the happy recipients of the Church Commissioner s largesse and it
was not uncommon for freehold houses to be bought for less than
half their worth. As an indirect result of this feeding frenzy,
most of the houses in Maida Vale were converted into flats.
Recently the economic climate has changed to favour houses over
flats and much of the eighties conversion work is being undone.
The big attraction of buying a house in Maida Vale is the multitude
of communal gardens, the largest of which lies between Warrington
and Randolph Crescent and is nearly 3 acres in size.
Whilst the centre of the area is dominated by
large red brick mansion blocks, the southern-most corner of Maida
Vale centres about Little Venice, so called because of the views
of the junction of three branches of the grand union canal. There
is a parade of useful shops and restaurants on Clifton Road and
Clifton Nursery garden centre on Clifton Villas, which completes
the pictures of a largely self-sustaining community.
Marble Arch
Marble Arch is a white Carrara marble monument near Speakers' Corner
in Hyde Park, at the western end of Oxford Street in LONDON, England,
near the tube station of the same name. Only members of the royal
family and the King's Troop, Royal Horse Artillery are allowed to
pass through the arch.
Marylebone
Located between the busy shops of Oxford Circus and the green expanses
of Regents Park, Marylebone has rapidly gained a new fashionable
status.
Plagued by traffic and historically populated largely with offices,
the area has seen resurgence as a residential hot spot over the
last decade. A mixture of red brick mansion blocks, 1930's and 1960's
developments dominate around Baker Street. Property around Marylebone's
buzzing High Street comprises of flats set in elegant Terracotta
and Georgian blocks (especially around Wimpole, Harley and Welbeck
Streets) and a number of mews homes set in quiet cobbled lanes.
The area is still largely owned by Howard de Walden and Portman
Estates. Lease length affects prices.
Local landlord, Howard de Walden Estate, has gone against the typical
trend in LONDON high streets of only having the usual major chain
stores, and has encouraged smaller retailers and specialist shops,
which gives the High Street a mix of the familiar and individual.
The upshot of this is an attractive and buzzing high-street. The
second is the Jubilee line which runs via Baker Street to Canary
Wharf. The result is a 25 minute direct journey from the heart of
the West End into the core of the financial district.
The result has been a relatively large increase
in prices in general, with the area around the High Street increasing
the most. In the past, like Pimlico, one could expect a hefty discount
from the equivalent properties in CHELSEA SQUARE, Kensington and Notting
Hill. Marylebone maintains a discount, but it has reduced significantly
in the last couple of years. Properties vary widely in the area:
from period houses, to large mansion blocks, to the Georgian garden
squares of Montagu and Bryanston and all the mews in between.
Mayfair
Solid, respectable haunts of the wealthy. Located between both Hyde
and Regents Parks and on the doorstop of the West End's sights and
attractions, Mayfair and St. James's have remained the desired location
of rich bankers, embassy staff and wealthy internationals for generations.
Large red brick, Georgian and Victorian mansions provide grand,
serviced flats and apartments in Mayfair. Shepherds Market to the
south has a number of small cottages and mews properties. St. James's
boasts a number of substantial, smart homes although much of its
property is now used as offices. The Jubilee Line service to Docklands
has attracted young bankers looking for flats to rent. Much of the
area is owned by the Grosvenor Estate and hence long leases are
rare.
Mayfair has always been synonymous with smart LONDON. Its position
as the most expensive property on the Monopoly board has only added
to its cachet. The modern reality is slightly different as its nature
was changed by the wartime damage to the city which resulted in
many offices being relocated to the West End from which they have
never left. Added to this, during the oil boom of the 1970s,
many large apartments were bought by Middle Eastern buyers and they
tend to use them for short periods of the year only. The result
has been a retention of the outward smartness but a loss of street
life with the exception of the area around Shepherds
market.
Mayfair is named after the fortnight-long May Fair that took place
there from 1686 until it was banned from that location in 1764.
(Before 1686, the May Fair was held in the Haymarket; after 1764,
it moved to Fair Field in Bow).
Most of Mayfair is owned by the Grosvenor Estate but there is a
substantial area around Berkeley Square which is owned by a middle
eastern consortium. Both these landlords are first-class managers
and have maintained these estates in an exemplary manner. As many
owners of leaseholds have not qualified for enfranchisement there
is still a substantial amount of short leasehold property.
The core of Mayfair is Grosvenor Square. This
contains the American Embassy and, for the most part, large portered
blocks of flats. The American Embassy, with its draconian security,
is a major blight on properties in the immediate vicinity. Berkeley
Square and Hanover Square are now mainly offices and the area around
Oxford Street primarily retail. While Bond Street has remained resolutely
upmarket the same cannot be said of Oxford Street and the area around
it is not a prime residential area.
Communications are excellent, particularly now
with new Jubilee line links in Green Park with Waterloo and Docklands.
This reinforces Mayfair as a perfect spot for a pied a terre, though
for families it leaves something to be desired as few of the houses
have decent gardens.
Melbury Road
An area synonymous with Victorian architecture. Here can be traced
in some detail the evolution of LONDONs nineteenth-century
suburban housing. Among the many examples are the fashionable Italianate
villas of the 1820s and 30s in Campden Hill and Holland Park;
the opulent large mansions of Millionaires Row in Kensington
Palace Gardens; and the red-brick Domestic Revival artists
houses of the 1860s and after in the Melbury Road area. Victorian
ecclesiastical design can also be studied in its many variants,
in the areas churches, chapels and convents, including the
Greek Revival architecture of Kensal Green Cemetery.
Mill Hill
Mill Hill is north of LONDON and near to junction 5 of the M1 motorway.
Here live many who commute on a daily basis into LONDON to work.
It is an affluent area and boasts many good schools and new housing
developments.
Mill Hill is a place in the LONDON Borough of Barnet. It is a suburb
situated 9 miles (14.5 km) north west of Charing Cross.
There are four areas in Mill Hill: Mill Hill Village,
Mill Hill Broadway, Mill Hill East, and Partingdale. A further part
of Mill Hill, The Hale, is on the borders of Mill Hill and Edgware,
and is often considered to be part of the latter.
Notting Hill
Once a shabby backwater of LONDON whose crumbling terraces were
overcrowded with immigrants, Notting Hill is now proudly one of
the capital's most fashionable areas. The Ladbroke Grove side of
Notting Hill boasts the large Victorian houses and leafy, peaceful
private gardens and squares which the film of the same name idealised.
Most of the grand properties here have survived being carved into
conversions and flats. Notting Hill's borders with Bayswater offer
much more modest properties but is also experiencing rapid change
as trendy stores and restaurants force out the more traditional
shops as rents escalate skyward.
Notting Hill Gate itself is hardly an inspiring
area. Despite the wealth surrounding it almost any house
is now worth over £1 million it retains a certain seediness
that is rather surprising. Second-hand record shops and Macdonald's
compete with Kensington Palace Gardens which must be the grandest
address in LONDON.
The cause of its new-found glamour is to be found
in the garden squares and more particularly in the communal gardens.
If you want to live in Central LONDON and then family life does
not get any better than in a house with its own secure private park
shared with a few dozen like-minded people. As the Americans investment
bankers have discovered this over the last 15 years, prices for
these gems have rocketed. Where the general Central LONDON market
has doubled in the last seven years, houses on the communal gardens
have trebled.
Notting Hill has always had a bohemian and cosmopolitan
edge to it and that continues further to the North around
Westbourne Grove. Here there are restaurants of every nationality
and every year at the end of August it explodes in a three-day cacophony
of sound, rubbish and marijuana smoke that is the Notting Hill Gate
carnival. Sensitive souls wanting to live here should arrange their
holidays then.
Around the Portobello Road, with its famous street
markets, it is more like New York than any other part of LONDON
with one street separating smart restaurants and wine bars from
seedy clubs and street barrows.
Ovington Gardens
Property in Ovington Gardens is a highly sought in the Borough of
Kensington and CHELSEA SQUARE.
Paddington
Traditionally the borough's least expensive location, Paddington
had earned an image of scruffy hotels and run down bed-sits. Yet
spiralling prices in Kensington and Notting Hill Gate have created
a renewed demand from a new set of more wealthy residents. Flats
still predominate, although now far more plush in their execution,
whilst many of the areas grand white stucco buildings have been
redeveloped into imposing family homes set around leafy, quiet squares.
Still very much an area in transition, scruffy corners are never
too far away, yet grand plans for the regeneration of the Paddington
Basin around the canal will provide the area with a further positive
impetus. Queensway provides a buzzing, cosmopolitan shopping centre
that never seems to close.
Park Lane
Park Lane and Mayfair have always been synonymous with smart LONDON.
Its position as the most expensive property on the Monopoly board
has only added to its cachet. The modern reality is slightly different
as its nature was changed by the wartime damage to the city which
resulted in many offices being relocated to the West End from which
they have never left. Added to this, during the oil boom of the
1970s, many large apartments were bought by Middle Eastern
buyers and they tend to use them for short periods of the year only.
The result has been a retention of the outward smartness but a loss
of street life with the exception of the area around
Shepherds market.
Pembridge Gardens
Pembridge Gardens is a pretty road with a quiet aspect. It comprises
mainly of Victorian period buildings. Some have been converted into
hotels but most are residential use. Ideal location for Portobello
Road and the very many chic shops , restaurants and bars in the
area.
Phillimore Estate
Kensington, as opposed to South Kensington which is the area
south of the Cromwell Road, or West Kensington which is west of
Olympia, is one of the most popular residential areas in LONDON.
Families particularly like it as the houses tend to be bigger than
those in CHELSEA SQUARE and the proximity of the parks of Kensington Gardens
and Holland Park make it ideal for children and dogs.
The biggest and most expensive houses are on the Phillimore Estate
which runs up the hill to the east of Holland Park. These are, for
the most part, large stuccoed houses with big gardens. In the same
area there are some large mansion blocks and developments with parking,
such as Campden Hill Court and Observatory Gardens. The whole block
between Kensington Church Street and Holland Park is quiet and tree-lined
with family-size houses now selling for more than £3 million.
Pimlico
Pimlico offers a stylish, central location for those who don't wish
to pay Belgravia prices. Flats and apartments dominate with family
homes a rarity. Tall white stucco buildings offer grand accommodation
although the odd small hotel can be found, a reminder of Pimlico's
more run down past as a haven for bed-sits and short-let flats.
Ex-council blocks line the river next to Dolphin Square. A few streets
are busy through-routes, yet a vigorously enforced traffic scheme
ensures that the majority enjoy a quiet life.
The phrase up-andcoming and Pimlico are often
coupled and have been for forty years. To date it has yet
to arrive. On paper it looks good next door to Belgravia
and CHELSEA SQUARE (it used to be part of the Grosvenor Estate), close
to the City, good transport and Victoria station in its heart. Like
Bayswater (also up and coming for the same period) it is a station
(Paddington in Bayswaters case) which is its problem as with
it comes cheap tourist hotels and the detritus that accompanies
them such as tacky tourist shops and cafes selling limp hamburgers.
There are exceptions to this such as the area
that is known as The Grid, a good descriptive of stucco
houses on wide streets, and Warwick and Eccleston Squares both of
which are similar to their grander cousins in Belgravia. Yet prices
are well below those achieved only half a mile away and the reason
becomes apparent when you go inside. For the most part the buildings
are slightly narrower than in Belgravia or CHELSEA SQUARE and two foot
makes a huge difference particularly with flat conversions where
the common parts get mean and the room proportions feel tight. Also
the houses are built much closer back-to-back than in Kensington
which restricts light and privacy.
Dolphin Square, near the river is huge impersonal
block of flats that are popular as pied-a-terres for politicians
and between this and the rest of Pimlico is a huge housing estate
- the Tachbrook Estate - that sits like a cuckoo rather uneasily
in the middle.
The transport is excellent with Victoria and Pimlico
Tubes to choose from and the Jubilee line at Westminster not too
far away for journeys to Canary Wharf.
The Embankment, for those that prefer the road,
is ideal for the same journey.
For all its flaws, Pimlico has its fans
for value and convenience it is hard to beat.
Porchester Terrace
Porchester Terrace in City of Westminster which is home to the government
and countless ministry office blocks has a surprising wealth of
residential property. Elegant Georgian and Queen Anne town houses
can be found close to Westminster Abby whilst further period properties
abound in Vincent Square. Developers have currently besieged the
area converting any building available into luxury apartments.
Home to LONDON's most famous tourist attractions but also a varied
array of property and locations for those who chose to live in the
busy heart of the capital. Noise, traffic, pollution and an alarmingly
high number of homeless people are a small price to pay for the
buzzing shops, pubs, clubs and restaurants that living in central
LONDON provides.
Belgravia, Westminster and Pimlico, to the south
of Green Park and Mayfair to the east of Hyde Park attract the wealthy,
whilst Soho has successfully reinvented itself from seedy backwater
to a Mecca for LONDON's trendy set. Marylebone, east of Regents
Park and once a traffic clogged main road, has gained a worthy fashionable
reputation. To the north, the smart residential areas of Maida Vale,
Little Venice and St. John's Wood boast metropolitan and cosmopolitan
locations while Kilburn and Paddington to the northeast offer cheaper,
less grand properties.
Primrose Hill
Primrose Hill has a similar feel to the smarter roads in Notting
Hill, mainly mid-Victorian terraced houses, painted a variety of
colours, residents including such glitterati as Martin Amis and
Jude Law, as well as bankers, stockbrokers and barristers. As with
much of Camden, there is a strong element of social housing which
ensures a wide social mix. Most of the houses have small gardens
by North LONDON standards (20 ft or less). Both Regents Park and
Primrose Hill are close by There is a strong village feel to Primrose
Hill that centres about the parade of shops and restaurants on the
northern end of Regents Park Road, which most notably include Odette's
Restaurant, The Engineer Bar and Restaurant and the wine merchant,
Bibendum.
The most popular houses are those that overlook
Regents Park and the LONDON Zoo on St Marks and Prince Albert Road
Square or those set about the Central Garden Square of Chalcot Square.
Much of Primrose Hill was owned by Eton College, who sold up most
of their Holdings locally during the 1990's.
Putney
Putney is directly over the river from Fulham. It is more of a town
with a busy central high street dominated by the usual major and
minor chain shops and stores. Its main attraction is the river itself
where many rowing clubs are located and it is here that the annual
Boat Race starts.
Solid and respectable LONDON suburbia. Both Putney and Roehampton
attract young, affluent families drawn by the proximity of decent
schools and the plentiful supply of beautiful parkland. Victorian
properties of all sizes can be found off Putney High Street and
the Lower Richmond Road, whilst West Putney boasts larger Edwardian
homes, many detached. Elegant mansion blocks fringe the river and
a plentiful stock of conversions and modern apartment blocks are
to be found on Putney Hill. Roehampton has a large number of ex-council
estates that offer great value for money. Georgian and Victorian
terraces, cottages and a number of larger family homes in the roads
off Putney Heath. Traffic can be a problem although the District
Line does provide a welcome alternative.
Between the river and the Lower Richmond Road are predominantly
Victorian and Edwardian terraces, the majority of which are below
£750,000, with the exception of those backing on to the river
itself. Along the river, there are several large mixed developments
of flats and townhouses some still under construction.
The high street leads up to Putney Hill, on the
west of which is a grid of wide tree-lined streets with Victorian
and Edwardian houses. These properties have generous gardens and
are popular with young city bankers and their families. Pries range
from £750,000 to £2.5 million. Further up towards Putney
Heath, there are larger detached houses, many on plots of a third
acre, commanding prices of £3 million upwards.
The east side of Putney Hill is dominated by large
blocks of purpose-built flats with smaller Victorian terraces behind.
The attractions of Putney for families are the
good sized properties, numerous excellent schools and easy access
to the surrounding open spaces of Putney Heath, Barnes and Wimbledon.
Public transport is good with both underground and mainline trains
into LONDON. However, the road across Putney Bridge, along the High
Street and up Putney Hill is one of the main arteries out of LONDON
to the A3 and is therefore busy and congested at peak times. Putney
also suffers from being under the Heathrow flightpath.
Regents Park
Grand, white Regency terraces set in the heart of one of LONDON's
most beautiful parks don't come cheap. Not all properties in Regents
Park demand such a high price or carry such prestige, but be prepared
to pay a premium no less. Much of the larger properties are managed
by the Crown Estate and command a high price, yet Prince Albert
Road has a good supply of Victorian flats for those with less deep
pockets.
Regents Park, as an area, is dominated by the eponymous park. At
the centre of the park are the open air theatre, Queen Marys gardens
and the boating lake. Around the fringes of the park are an athletics
track and tennis courts, LONDON Zoo and a mosque.
Arranged around the circumference are the Nash-designed
terraces stucco fronted houses and flats which look out over the
park itself. The local landowner, the Crown Estate, has largely
retained ownership of the freeholds and with nearly all of the houses
and flats still held on Crown Estate leases. The Estate management
scheme is vigorous houses are redecorated every four years in accordance
with the terms of their leases, in exactly the same shade of off-white.
In addition, it is not uncommon for some of the
houses and flats to have onerous ground rent provisions in their
leases, which can be costly to buy out.
Critics of Regents Park say that the area can
be somewhat bleak, a lovely throw-back to Regency LONDON trapped
in amber by an overly prescriptive Estate Management scheme. It
can be a long way to the nearest cappuccino but as elegant and unified
architecture in an urban setting, it has no peers in LONDON.
Queens Park
Increasingly popular and only a few short tube stops from the heart
of LONDON and the City. An abundance of Victorian terraces and flats
are now being bought up by first time buyers and young professionals
who can't afford the sky high prices of West Hampstead or North
Kensington. Irish immigrants originally settled in Kilburn, and
many descendants still live here, especially around the main shopping
areas. Parts are still quite scruffy and run-down, so it's advisable
to explore the area extensively before making any decisions. Queen's
Park commands a higher price tag the closer you get to the park
and offers beautiful late Victorian and Edwardian properties.
Richmond
Leafy Richmond, with over 2,500 acres of royal parks and miles of
river bank feels more akin to rural Surrey or Middlesex than LONDON.
Prosperous with great properties, fantastic parks, good transport
links and schools, Richmond remains a highly sought after location
and a barren ground for bargain hunters.
The Green, surrounded by elegant Georgian and
earlier houses, is the core and the main shopping area of the town.
Prices range from £1.8 million to £5 million here. As
you go south and up Richmond Hill, towards the Park there are more
Victorian houses with views across the river and beyond to Ham House.
The rest of the Hill is made up predominantly of detached and semi-detached
houses of approximately 3,000 to 4,000 square feet and ranging in
price from £1.5 - £3 million.
The Thames dominates both the geography and the character of the
borough. Barnes, with its mixture of large affluent homes and village
cottages, resides at Richmond's most northern tip. Pretty Kew, Sheen
and Richmond itself follow the Thames west, whilst busy Twickenham
sits opposite on the rivers northern banks. Teddington follows the
river south, whilst suburban Whitton and Hampton lie east at the
border with neighbouring Hounslow.
Schools are plentiful and some of the best in the country with Ibstock
Place at the eastern end of the park where the parents' list reads
like a Who's Who of the entertainment world and the American and
German Schools.
Access is relatively straightforward on the map,
with both a fast mainline link to Waterloo (25 minutes) and the
terminus of the District line (one hour to the City). However, travelling
by car is difficult, particularly when the A316 (linking to M3)
the south circular is afflicted by the school run.
Shepherds Bush
Popular with first time buyers attracted by a plentiful stock of
reasonably priced Victorian terraces and conversions along with
a central location and good transport links. Larger houses to the
west feel more like neighbouring Chiswick whilst further north property
gets progressively grimier especially around Wormwood Scrubs. White
City has its share of council estates and the ever expanding BBC
to contend with.
Sloane Square
Part of LONDON's most desirable borough of Kensington & CHELSEA SQUARE.
Excellent transport links, beautiful parks, fashionable shops and
restaurants, a wealth of galleries and museums and grandiose properties
provide an enviable list of attributes. Sky high prices put Kensington
and CHELSEA SQUARE beyond the reach of most, whilst traffic and congestion
at least prove that those fortunate enough to live here don't have
it all their own way. The south of the borough has always proved
a sought after location for the wealthier middle classes and city
types blessed with bonuses to match their egos.
Sloane Square provides an exclusive residence yet the borough's
more western reaches, once previously considered shabby and run
down, have now emerged as property hot spots. Notting Hill has experienced
a very public rebirth, whilst even the grimier areas of North Kensington
are experiencing an up turn.
Soho
For decades Soho was home to LONDON's sleazier side. Today, its
tight streets and alleyways are filled with trendy bars and restaurants
creating a buzzing, young atmosphere. Space is at a premium, so
accommodation comprises mainly of flats and maisonettes above shops
and restaurants. Houses are very rare and the lack of gardens increases
the desirability for a roof garden or balcony on any property. Attracted
by its cosmopolitan character, Soho has become a favourite haunt
for designers and artists as well as LONDON's gay and Chinese communities.
Some seedy corners still exist and drug pushers and the homeless
still prove a problem, yet without its gritty edge, Soho would lose
its character.
South Kensington
All very respectable. Smart multi storey stucco houses off Old Brompton
Road and Gloucester Road, many of which have been converted into
flats. Larger houses around the Fulham and Brompton Roads all of
which command an equally large price. More modest homes can be found
to the north of the Fulham Road. A plentiful supply of smart shops
and restaurants.
Most of residential South Kensington lies to the south of the Cromwell
Road. To the east Knightsbridge begins at Brompton Cross and the
southernmost boundary is the Fulham Road.
Over the last 20 years South Kensington has become
one of the very best residential areas of LONDON as the Smiths
Charity estate as it was (it is now owned by the Wellcome Trust)
has been developed and improved. Onslow Gardens and Onslow Square
are the prime areas and alongside them is the Brompton's, a major
development of the old Brompton Hospital that was completed at the
end of the 1990s. Most of the shops and cafes are around South
Kensington Station which is about to be redeveloped into a major
office and retail centre. Living close to this for the next few
years will be noisy and dusty.
The area to the west of the tube station is a
good residential area but lacks the uniformity of the Smiths
Charity Estate. Stanhope Gardens and Queensgate have nice flats
but suffer from road noise and, in the case of Stanhope Gardens,
from its proximity to the Gloucester Road which is at its least
glamorous at the point around the underground station where there
are a number of large tourist hotels. These also affect the area
towards Earls Court such as Collingham Gardens.
The majority of the property tends to be flats,
though Pelham Crescent and Thurloe Square have some of the nicest
houses in LONDON. Most of the leases in the Wellcome Estate are
now mid-term (50 years) but the leasehold enfranchisement legislation
has left a number of shared freeholds and much longer leases.
St James Park
St. James's boasts a number of substantial, smart homes although
much of its property is now used as offices. The Jubilee Line service
to Docklands has attracted young bankers looking for flats to rent.
Much of the area is owned by the Grosvenor Estate and hence long
leases are rare.
St Johns Wood
Located north west of Regent's Park, and stretching leafily out
from Lord's cricket ground, St. John's Wood was one of LONDON's
first informal garden suburbs. Property ranges from huge Regency
villas and Victorian houses to 1960's apartment blocks and modern
flats. St. John's Wood Terrace offers a pretty enclave of multi-coloured
three-storey Victorian houses, whilst grand luxury apartment are
to be found off Wellington Road. High security-gated properties
and CCTV cameras don't add to the friendliness of the area. Traffic
can be a problem.
With it's adjoining neighbours of Primrose Hill, Regents Park and
Maida Vale, on most mornings a hard core of tiny Viennese ladies
are found taking coffee and pastries in the cafes on the high street,
reminders of St Johns Wood's wartime past as a destination for European
refugees.
In fact there is more of an international feel
to St Johns Wood than there is to its immediate neighbours, which
is hardly surprising given the draw of both the American School
which is tucked away behind Abbey Road and the huge Regents Park
mosque.
Lords cricket ground is a blessing for local enthusiasts
and an irritation for most of the residents as, throughout the summer,
St Johns Wood is invaded by visiting cricket fans from across the
world. Primrose Hill is a short walk away, as is Regents Park, and
following the tow path along Regents Canal (part of the Grand Union
canal) past LONDON Zoo leads to Camden Lock market.
The St Johns Wood Estate was largely developed
during the 19th Century by local builders who took leases from the
big landowners, the Eyre Estate and Harrow School. Most houses are
now owned as freeholds, but there are still a number of houses on
mid term or short leases, often with onerous ground rent clauses.
Two very real advantages to living in St Johns
Wood are that the West End is within walking distance, and that
the underground station is on the Jubilee Line; which is LONDON's
newest and perhaps best line.
Sussex Gardens
Pleasant central LONDON location: convenient for all major sights,
museums and theatres. Close to all shopping districts; Oxford Street
and Piccadilly Circus and near to the open spaces of Hyde Park,
Lancaster Gate and Paddington Stations
The Bishops Avenue
The Bishop's Avenue LONDON, N2 in the LONDON Borough of Barnet is
one of LONDON's most exclusive residential thoroughfares. It is
named after the Bishop's Wood, originally owned by the Bishop of
LONDON through which it runs. The Bishop's Avenue connects the north
side of Hampstead Heath at Kenwood (Hampstead Lane) to East Finchley
and is on the boundary of the Borough to the LONDON Borough of Haringey.
The road is a favourite with the international
ultra-rich and is often referred to by its nickname of "Millionaires'
Row" (although recently, it has been referred to as "Billionaire's
Row" in keeping with inflation), and each property occupies
a 2-3 acre plot, which is relatively palatial for LONDON.CHELSEA SQUARE During
the mid 1990s, the street came to resemble a building site with
many of the original houses being re-built. Properties on the street
now have a vast array of individualistic architectural styles.
Property prices on the street sailed past the
£1 million mark in the late 1980s[2], with house prices now
typically starting from about £5,000,000 ($9,497,759 USD),
with no upper bound. Currently Turkish tycoon Halis Toprak's 30,000
sq ft home, styled around a Greek temple, is for sale at £50
million ($94 million USD), making it one of the most expensive houses
in the world, as listed by Forbes magazine.
Amongst the road's rich and famous residents are
the Saudi Royal Family, whose LONDON residence is situated there,
although details of other residents and their addresses are kept
relatively sketchy. Construction is constantly underway on The Bishops
Avenue and prospective residents will purchase large properties
as they become available, only to flatten them and construct their
own from scratch. Another practice is to purchase any available
property on the road, with the intention of moving to another non-available
site, and to subsequently move when the more desired plot becomes
available; however, there has been some recent press attention into
whether the Bishop's Avenue has entered something of a decline.
This has been mainly attributed to the fact that the road often
appears to be very 'dead', because many of the residences do not
appear to be primary residences, with the owners often residing
abroad. Property switches hands frequently between the road's existing
residents, and prominent corner positions are popular, as are some
of the sites which are completely concealed from the road with gardens.
The Avenue is noted for the number of entrepreneurs
and tycoons residents on it - the sudden influx of self-made billionaires
(as opposed to aristocracy) is a recent phenomenon in LONDON, and
the Avenue is therefore markedly different to the highly exclusive
but much more subtle and subdued character of areas such as Belgravia
or Mayfair.
The fairly lax planning regulations on the road
have resulted in some astonishing, and certainly unconventional,
constructions as residents vie for attention and prestige. The exact
details of properties on the avenue are not readily available although
it appears that swimming pools, tennis courts, elevators and even
private bowling alleys are popular.
The designs of some of the houses, nearly all
of which are surrounded by high fences and security gates, have
been criticized by various local and council groups although the
wealthy residents, with the enormous houses eligible to very heavy
taxation, usually gain planning permission from the local council,
and some would argue that given the developments which have been
allowed to take place, the architectural blend of questionable taste
has become the avenue's signature style and it would therefore be
pointless to try and restrain or restrict future development.
Famous residents:
Dame Gracie Fields
Lakshmi Mittal
Billy Butlin
Saudi Royal Family
Totteridge
Detached houses and larger detached houses. Totteridge, popular
with pop stars and footballers alike offers a choice of substantial
properties, many set in equally substantial grounds. Totteridge's
main attraction is undoubtedly its location close to the countryside
and the availability of a Tube line so far out in LONDON's suburbs.
Property in Whetstone is by comparison more modest in both price
and size and has a number of more affordable purpose built apartment
blocks.
Twickenham
Twickenham provides a good hunting ground for those priced out of
Richmond on the opposite side of the Thames. Late Victorian and
mid war terraces and semis predominate although some conversions
can be found towards the town centre. Larger Edwardian homes set
in Marble Hill to the east. Riverside locations command a premium.
Strawberry Hill to the south offers a leafy suburban setting with
a varied stock of Victorian, Edwardian and mid-war houses. No tube,
but a fair train service.
Upper Grosvenor Street
Upper Grosvenor Street in City of Westminster. Solid, respectable
haunts of the wealthy. Located between both Hyde and Regents Parks
and on the doorstop of the West End's sights and attractions, Mayfair
and St. James's have remained the desired location of rich bankers,
embassy staff and wealthy internationals for generations. Large
red brick, Georgian and Victorian mansions provide grand, serviced
flats and apartments in Mayfair. Shepherds Market to the south has
a number of small cottages and mews properties. St. James's boasts
a number of substantial, smart homes although much of its property
is now used as offices. The Jubilee Line service to Docklands has
attracted young bankers looking for flats to rent. Much of the area
is owned by the Grosvenor Estate and hence long leases are rare.
Mayfair has always been synonymous with smart LONDON. Its position
as the most expensive property on the Monopoly board has only added
to its cachet. The modern reality is slightly different as its nature
was changed by the wartime damage to the city which resulted in
many offices being relocated to the West End from which they have
never left. Added to this, during the oil boom of the 1970s,
many large apartments were bought by Middle Eastern buyers and they
tend to use them for short periods of the year only. The result
has been a retention of the outward smartness but a loss of street
life with the exception of the area around Shepherds
market.
Upper Phillimore Gardens
Property in Upper Phillimore Gardens, situated within the Kensington
Conservation Area, is an architecturally preserved, historical LONDON
suburb.
The area is located moments from the fashionable restaurants, shops
and bars of Kensington High Street. For the motorist easy access
is provided to the A4/M4 and A40 (M) for routes in and out of LONDON.
High Street Kensington (District and Circle lines) is the nearest
underground station while Kensington (Olympia) (British Rail and
District Line) is also nearby.
Wandsworth
This is now a well established residential area, full of refugees
who have moved south of the river escaping rising prices in Fulham.
It has good schooling with plenty of green space with quick and
easy access to the city and a good supply of well maintained family
houses.
Gentrified beyond recognition over the past fifteen years and invaded
by the middle classes to all four corners, today's Wandsworth is
thoroughly respectable. Balham, Tooting and Southfields provide
safe, if unexciting suburbia, whilst riverside Wandsworth, Battersea
and Putney boast rejuvenated warehouses and plush apartments amongst
their remaining Victorian and Edwardian housing. Only Docklands
has seen more development over the past ten years, yet the lack
of a tube line in the north of the borough has only proved to exacerbate
Wandsworth's main drawback, traffic.
The main focus of family life is around Wandsworth
Common with large detached and semi-detached houses ranging in price
from £750,000 to £2.5 million. Particularly popular
roads are Westover Road and the roads leading off it. On the other
side of Wandsworth Common is the Bellevue Road with its restaurants,
galleries and boutiques making a rather attractive natural border
with nearby Balham. In the middle of the common is a grid of roads,
known as the toastrack with houses backing on to the common fetching
upwards of £2 million. Spencer Park on the north side of the
common is of particular interest with large detached houses backing
on to a seven acre private park.
Whilst there is a good choice of pubs and restaurants
in the area, the only real shopping is along the Bellevue Road,
otherwise expect a trip across Wandsworth Bridge and into CHELSEA SQUARE.
Public transport is limited, however, mainline stations are at Wandsworth
Town and Wandsworth Common both going into Waterloo
Warwick Square
Warwick Square is a pleasant residential area close to an excellent
range of local shops, bars and restaurants as well as Knightsbridge,
the riverbank and Victoria Station (Circle, District and Victoria
lines and British Rail) for links throughout the city and West End.
Westminster
Westminster, home to the government and countless ministry office
blocks has a surprising wealth of residential property. Elegant
Georgian and Queen Anne town houses can be found close to Westminster
Abby whilst further period properties abound in Vincent Square.
Developers have currently besieged the area converting any building
available into luxury apartments.
Home to LONDON's most famous tourist attractions but also a varied
array of property and locations for those who chose to live in the
busy heart of the capital. Noise, traffic, pollution and an alarmingly
high number of homeless people are a small price to pay for the
buzzing shops, pubs, clubs and restaurants that living in central
LONDON provides.
Belgravia, Westminster and Pimlico, to the south
of Green Park and Mayfair to the east of Hyde Park attract the wealthy,
whilst Soho has successfully reinvented itself from seedy backwater
to a Mecca for LONDON's trendy set. Marylebone, east of Regents
Park and once a traffic clogged main road, has gained a worthy fashionable
reputation. To the north, the smart residential areas of Maida Vale,
Little Venice and St. John's Wood boast metropolitan and cosmopolitan
locations while Kilburn and Paddington to the northeast offer cheaper,
less grand properties.
Wilton Crescent
Wilton Crescent is situated in City of Westminster.
Westminster, home to the government and countless ministry office
blocks has a surprising wealth of residential property. Elegant
Georgian and Queen Anne town houses can be found close to Westminster
Abby whilst further period properties abound in Vincent Square.
Developers have currently besieged the area converting any building
available into luxury apartments.
Home to LONDON's most famous tourist attractions but also a varied
array of property and locations for those who chose to live in the
busy heart of the capital. Noise, traffic, pollution and an alarmingly
high number of homeless people are a small price to pay for the
buzzing shops, pubs, clubs and restaurants that living in central
LONDON provides.
Wimbledon
Not all of Wimbledon boasts the obvious attractions of the slick
and trendy village. South Wimbledon, once the somewhat cheaper neighbour
with its tightly packed roads of often ordinary Victorian and Edwardian
terraces, now commands prices to almost rival those in its more
sought after neighbour. Modern apartments and luxury lifestyle flats
dominate Wimbledon Hill Road heading up to the village. The village
itself has the ubiquitous collection of smart shops, boutiques and
restaurants whilst the roads directly off its busy thoroughfare
offer grand Victorian family homes in smart, tree lined streets.
Large Victorian and Edwardian family homes are also to be found
in the wide leafy roads between Wimbledon Common and Wimbledon Park.
The Common itself stretches all the way to Putney Vale and premiums
are high for any property overlooking its green, open expanse.
Wimbledon has two distinctive parts the village and the town.
Unlike many other areas where all the green spaces have been filled
in around it, Wimbledon Common is sufficiently rural and large that
there is a real sense of arriving in a distinctive place. Wimbledon
looks in on itself rather than being a satellite of central LONDON.
Wimbledon village has the same feel as a small Surrey town with
pretty houses behind walls and a High Street where one would not
be surprised to see people riding horses. The houses are low-built
and not in the usual terraces that characterise west LONDON. More
than anywhere in South-West LONDON there are lots of large detached
houses on separate plots.
Down the hill, Wimbledon town feels like a town,
with all the usual high street retail names very much in evidence.
The atmosphere is much more urban with a mainline railway station
and multiplex cinemas. Prices are generally lower in the town than
the village reflecting the snobbery between the two.
Unlike Richmond and other areas in South West
LONDON, Wimbledon is off the flight path into Heathrow.
Transport is mixed, with bottlenecks around Wandsworth
and over the bridges crossing the Thames. It is on the District
line of the Underground but many use the mainline stations to access
the City.
Winnington Road
Winninton Road is situated in the Hampstead Garden Suburb
The Hampstead Garden Suburb lies between Hampstead and Highgate,
just to the North of the Heath and only another half a mile further
out of LONDON. But in this instance, half a mile makes all the difference
and the Garden Suburb represents a different style of living. Laid
out to a Lutyens design, the houses are predominantly low-built
and arts and crafts in style, with off-street parking and good sized
gardens.
The price of more suburban living is a shortage
of amenities. All shopping has to be done by car. The Bishops Avenue
is probably the best known road in North LONDON flanked with mansions
that seem to be immune from any local planning regulations.
Henrietta Barnet School for Girls regularly heads the National League
Tables.
Wycombe Square
Wycombe Square is located on a hill nearer the quiet surroundings
of Kensington, near Kensington Gardens and Holland Park
SW1, SW3, SW13, W8, W11, W12,
W14, NW3, N20
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