Kensington Palace Gardens
Kensington Palace Gardens is an exclusive street in Kensington, west of central London, near Kensington Gardens and Kensington Palace. Entered through gates at either end and guarded by sentry boxes, it was the location of the London Cage, the British government MI19 centre used during the Second World War and the Cold War. Several foreign diplomatic missions are located along it.
Entrance gates at the north end of Kensington Palace Gardens | |
Former name(s) | The Queen's Road |
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Location | Kensington, London, England |
Coordinates | 51°30′24″N 0°11′27″W |
From | Notting Hill Gate |
To | Kensington High Street |
A tree-lined avenue half a mile long studded with embassies, Kensington Palace Gardens is often cited as the "most exclusive address" in London, according to real estate agency Knight Frank. It is one of the most expensive residential streets in the world, and has long been known as "Millionaires Row", due to the huge wealth of its private residents, although in fact the majority of its current occupants are either national embassies or ambassadorial residences. As of late-2018, current market prices for a property in the street average over £35 million.[1]
It connects Notting Hill Gate with Kensington High Street. The southern section of Kensington Palace Gardens is called Palace Green.
Background
The road was originally called The Queen's Road and was renamed Kensington Palace Gardens around 1870 when plane trees were planted in the avenue. It was built from the 1840s onward on part of the grounds of Kensington Palace; the freehold still belongs to the Crown Estate. The palace, which is the residence of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester, Duke and Duchess of Kent, and Prince and Princess Michael of Kent, fronts the southern part of the street on the eastern side. The houses at the northern end are mostly Italianate, while those at the southern end are mostly in the Queen Anne style. For much of the 20th century a large proportion of the houses were occupied by embassies and ambassadors' residences. Some still are, but others have been renovated by the Crown Estate and sold to private buyers on long leases. One of these was bought in 2004 by the Indian steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal, who in 2008 was listed by Forbes magazine as the fourth richest man in the world. The sale was widely misreported at £70 million,[2] before accurate figures were available from HM Land Registry, where records state that on 30 June 2004, 18–19 Kensington Palace Gardens, along with three mews houses at the rear of the property, sold for £57,145,967.[3]
The mansion at 18 Kensington Palace Gardens, historically belonging to the Rothschild family, was sold in 2001.[4]
No. 8 was used as an interrogation centre for German POWs during and after the Second World War and was known as the London Cage. The house was demolished in 1961 and replaced by a glass-and-steel block of four apartments designed by Richard Seifert and completed in 1964. Flat 3 was on the market in 2006 as a three-bedroom apartment designed by international architect David Chipperfield,[5] valued at a minimum of £13.25 million through Knight Frank,[6][7] which sold in March 2007 for £10.29m.[8]
Due to the presence of likely terrorist targets — embassies etc., including those of Russia and Israel — both ends of the street have armed police checkpoints (Diplomatic Protection Group officers) with crash barriers as well as the original wrought-iron gates. Entry of pedestrians is not normally controlled, only vehicles. This has the side effect of leading to extremely low traffic volumes for a central London street. Some of the buildings occasionally set up barriers to keep vehicles at a distance.
The street is lit by very dim Victorian gaslight-style streetlights.
Notable residents
No. 10 was designed by Philip Hardwick for Sutherland Hall Sutherland, and the first tenant was the civil engineer James Meadows Rendel, who probably became resident in early 1852, and died there in 1856.[9] In 1862, Edmund Ernst Leopold Schlesinger Benzon, a German-born steel magnate, moved in and lived there until his death in 1873.[9] In 1896, the financier Leopold Hirsch had "substantial alterations" made, designed by Leonard Stokes, and he was resident until at least 1904.[9] No. 10 was home to the USSR Embassy from 1960 to 1986.[10]
Sir Frederick Wills, 1st Baronet (1838–1909), a member of the Wills tobacco family, had a London residence at No. 9,[11] but now it serves as the residence of the Indian High Commissioner. It is the residence of many ambassadors, including those of Saudi Arabia, UAE, and India, and Indian billionaire Lakshmi Mittal.
Princess Haya of Jordan resides in a home in Kensington Palace Gardens.[12][13][14]
References
- "Average house price in Kensington palace gardens" telegraph.co.uk 27 September 2018.
- "$128M Spend for London House". NBC News. 12 April 2004.
- Meek, James (17 April 2006). "Super rich". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
- If you have to ask the price The Daily Telegraph, By Ross Clark, 1 August 2001
- "McInerney Architects » Kensington".
- Where £10m is 'a snip', The Daily Telegraph, 28 June 2006
- The modernist ideal Archived 10 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine, The Spectator, 22 July 2006
- "House prices in Kensington Palace Gardens, London W8 4QP stand at £35,458,669 on average". Zoopla.
- "The Crown estate in Kensington Palace Gardens: Individual buildings". British History Online. Institute of Historical Research. Retrieved 10 December 2018.
- "10 Kensington Palace Gardens (Embassy of the USSR)". The National Archives.
- "The Bequests of Sir Frederick Wills". ghgraham.org.
- Hipwell, Deirdre (29 May 2017). "The £85m London home fit for a princess". The Times. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
- "Princess Haya Bint al-Hussein: The Dubai royal 'hiding in London'". BBC News. 30 July 2019. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
- Siddique, Haroon (5 March 2020). "Dubai ruler's wife who shattered perception of a perfect couple". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kensington Palace Gardens. |
- Kensington Palace Gardens at the Survey of London online:
- Planning decisions for Kensington Palace Gardens and Palace Green, 2000–2008
- Even £200m can't buy a house here, The Sunday Times, 14 May 2008
- Mira Bar-Hillel, The secrets of London's £2.5 billion street, Evening Standard, 10 June 2010
- Stuart Blakely, The Renovation Game: Kensington Palace Gardens, 15 January 2010