Hyde Park Estate
The Hyde Park Estate is a residential district in the Paddington area of London. It is an affluent area, characterised by a layout of squares and crescents, and is home to several embassies, prestigious businesses and celebrities.
Location
The Estate covers a triangular area, centred on Hyde Park Square, roughly located south-east of Sussex Gardens, west of the Edgware Road and north of Bayswater Road, between Lancaster Gate and Marble Arch.
It includes Connaught Square and Connaught Village, Water Gardens, Norfolk Crescent and the church of St John's, Hyde Park.
History
The Hyde Park Estate was developed in the nineteenth century on land owned by the Bishop of London and was originally known as the Paddington Estate. Ownership then passed to the Church Commissioners who remain the primary freeholders of the estate.[1]
After World War II, following extensive wartime bomb damage, the Church Commissioners rebuilt parts of the estate in partnership with the building firm Wates, introducing high density blocks of flats with underground car parking among the Victorian villas.[2]
Notable residents
Past residents include:
- Hertha Ayrton, Physicist: Norfolk Square
- Michael Balfe, Composer: Seymour Street
- Tony Blair, Connaught Square
- Lady Violet Bonham-Carter, Politician & Writer: 43 Gloucester Square
- Sir Charles Vyner Brooke, Last Rajah of Sarawak: 13 Albion Street
- Michael Caine: Albion Mews [3]
- Lord Randolph Churchill, Statesman: 2 Connaught Place
- Olive Schreiner, Author: 16 Portsea Place
- Robert Stephenson, Engineer: 33 Gloucester Square
- Marie Taglioni, Ballerina: 14 Connaught Square
- William Makepeace Thackeray, Author: 18 Albion Street
References
- ↑ "History of the Estate". The Hyde Park Estate.
- ↑ Elrington (editor), C.R. "A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 9, Hampstead, Paddington.". British History Online. British History Online.
- ↑ "Sir Michael Caine's former home hits the market".