Hyde Park Gardens Mews

Coordinates: 51°30′47″N 0°10′14″W / 51.51315°N 0.17065°W / 51.51315; -0.17065
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Hyde Park Gardens Mews
Hyde Park Gardens Mews in July 2009
Coordinates51°30′47″N 0°10′14″W / 51.51315°N 0.17065°W / 51.51315; -0.17065
Builtc. 1836–40
Listed Building – Grade II
Official name9, Clarendon Place W2, 48, Hyde Park Gardens Mews W2, 14A, Hyde Park Gardens Mews W2, 1-21, Hyde Park Gardens Mews W2
Designated10 April 1975[1]
Reference no.1278095
Hyde Park Gardens Mews is located in Greater London
Hyde Park Gardens Mews
Location of Hyde Park Gardens Mews in Greater London

Hyde Park Gardens Mews is a

cobbled road
with two entrances. The west entrance passes under an archway. The mews is entered by Clarendon Place at the west and Stanhope Terrace to the east. Sussex Place bisects the mews in the middle.

Nos. 1–21, 14A, and 48 Hyde Park Gardens Mews are listed Grade II on the National Heritage List for England in a group with 9 Clarendon Place. The mews is believed to have been designed by John Crake, built from 1836 to 1840 in conjunction with his Hyde Park Gardens development.[1]

The archway entrance to Clarendon Place from the mews in August 2014

Bridget Cherry, writing in the 1991 London: North West edition of the Pevsner Architectural Guides, describes the mews as the "most extensive survival" of the "original service buildings to support such grand establishments".[2]

The corner of Hyde Park Gardens Mews and Sussex Place features in the 1955 film

Lost with David Farrar and a scene in the 1961 film No Love for Johnnie with Peter Finch and Mary Peach.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b Historic England, "9, Clarendon Place W2, 48, Hyde Park Gardens Mews W2, 14A, Hyde Park Gardens Mews W2, 1-21, Hyde Park Gardens Mews W2 (1278095)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 28 May 2018
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