St. John's Wood.
The Hampstead portion of the
St. John's Wood or Eyre estate, low-lying and
not easily accessible, never attracted seats as Belsize
had done (fn. 35) and even the farm buildings lay on
the Marylebone side of the border. The Eyre
family was, however, always anxious to promote
building and in 1794 a plan was drawn up on the
model of Bath, with a crescent, circus, and square.
The plan was never executed, probably blighted
by the French wars, but from 1802 development
on the Eyre estate was directed by John Shaw,
a young architect inspired by the town-planning
ideals of the late 18th century. In 1803-4 he
exhibited views of a projected circus and in 1807
building began on the Marylebone portion. (fn. 36) In
1819 Col. Eyre began the first of several attempts to
promote the construction of a public road through
his estate, ultimately successful in the Finchley
Road Act of 1826. Finchley New Road and Avenue
Road, the southern part of which existed by 1824,
thrust northward into the Hampstead portion
of Eyre's land and were built by 1829. (fn. 37) Swiss
Cottage tavern was built at the apex of the two roads
by 1841. (fn. 38) At the western end of the estate Abbey
Road was driven northward by 1829. (fn. 39)
Building spread northward in the salient formed
by the Finchley and Avenue roads. A building agreement was made in 1838 (fn. 40) and in 1841 the vestry was
discussing the boundary with Marylebone at Avenue
Road and St. John's Wood Road (probably St.
John's Wood Park) where houses were being
erected. (fn. 41) Several houses, called Regent's Villas,
stood in the Hampstead section of Avenue Road by
1842. (fn. 42) There was a second agreement in 1845, followed by a burst of building activity in the later
1840s and 1850s. Between 1845 and 1852, 33 houses
were built in Finchley Road, 13 in the road parallel
to it, St. John's Wood Park, 16 in Avenue Road, 28
in Boundary Road, the east-west road joining them
at the southern boundary, and 13 in College Crescent to the north, bordering the Belsize estate.
Except for the last, which were stuccoed terraces
with iron balconies built by W. Wartnaby, most
houses were detached, even imposing, built in small
groups by a number of builders: C. C. Cook, E.
Thomas & Son, Thomas Clark, and Wartnaby. (fn. 43)
The buildings included the school for the blind,
built in 1848 at the southern junction of College
Crescent and Avenue Road and enlarged in 1864,
1878, and 1912; of brick with stone dressings, it had
an Italianate central block with two wings. (fn. 44) The
North Star public house was opened at the northeast tip of the estate in 1850 and, enclosed by the
curve of College Crescent, the New College of
Independent Dissenters, for training ministers, was
opened in 1851 in a building designed in an early
Tudor style by J. T. Emmett. He also designed the
college's Gothic chapel, opened soon afterwards to
the south, at the junction of Avenue Road and Adelaide Road. (fn. 45) Immediately south of the blind school
a large house, Sunnyside (later St. Columba's hospital), with a Greek Doric porch, was built by 1862
and possibly in 1847. (fn. 46) St. Paul's church was built on
the western side of Avenue Road in 1859. (fn. 47)
In 1851 the estate, like Chalcots and Belsize,
housed mainly the professional and commercial
classes: merchants, an Italian banker, retired manufacturers, people of private means, and some tradesmen, almost all with several servants. Coachmen,
grooms, and servants were housed in Regent's Villa
Mews. The writer James Buckingham (1786-1855)
lived in Avenue Road, (fn. 48) where William Collins, the
landscape painter, had lived at no. 20 from 1839-40.
William's son Wilkie set one of the scenes of his
novel The Woman in White, published in 1862 but
based on childhood recollections, at the turnpike at
Swiss Cottage. (fn. 49)
The character of new housing, to serve a slightly
lower social level, began to change after 1851, with
westward expansion along roads parallel with the
railway and at the western end around Abbey Road
and its side-roads. (fn. 50) Apart from Adelaide Road, the
St. John's Wood portion of which was later called
Hilgrove Road, (fn. 51) the westward-thrusting roads were
Boundary Road and Belsize Road, where 41 houses
were built in 1851-2, some by Robert Yeo, who was
later to build at Chalcots. Yeo also built some of the
17 houses of those years in Victoria (later Fairfax)
Road, which ran from Finchley Road to Belsize Road
at the north end of the estate; another 19 were built
at the same time in Albion (later Harben) Road, between Victoria and Adelaide roads. Bridge (later
Loudoun) Road, with 8 houses, ran from the northern group across the railway to Boundary Road and
St. Marylebone. At the western end of the estate 19
houses were built in Abbey Road, and 4 in Belgrave
Road and Boundary Mews were begun. (fn. 52) By 1862
most of the area between Avenue Road and Bridge
Road was built up with detached and semi-detached
houses. (fn. 53)
West of Bridge (Loudoun) Road the land sloped
to a shallow trough before rising again beyond the
Eyre estate. The slope, together with the narrowness
of the remaining sites imposed by the railway and
estate boundary, contributed to higher-density,
mostly terraced housing. (fn. 54) On the northern boundary two stables were built at Victoria (Fairfax) Mews
in 1852, and North End Road (later Fairhazel Gardens) provided access by 1855. (fn. 55) Eventually there
were 57 stables there, for omnibus horses, and
Britannia Terrace, in Belsize Road, and Victoria
(Fairfax) Road were built during the later 1850s and
early 1860s for the stable staff and drivers and conductors. A similar development took place in the
south-west at the opposite end of the estate, with
stabling and terraces in Bolton and Holtham roads
(1858-66), Belgrave Gardens, Alexandra Mews, and
part of Boundary Road. With transport assured,
close-packed middle-class housing followed in the
centre, especially in Boundary Road, in Springfield
Road to the south, and in Alexandra Road (built
after the marriage of the Prince of Wales in 1863)
and Belsize Road to the north. (fn. 56) By 1866 building
was virtually complete. (fn. 57)
In 1871-2 five houses were built in Belsize Road,
14 in Alexandra Road, and one in Bolton Road, followed by one house and six stables in Boundary
Mews in 1873. A few more houses were built in
Abbey and Boundary roads in 1880. (fn. 58) In 1881 the
mews were still overwhelmingly inhabited by stablemen and the like, although the streets surrounding
them also housed small craftsmen, clerks, agents,
and tradesmen, while professional people and businessmen occupied the other roads. (fn. 59) By the end of
the 1880s, the mews, off Fairfax Road, Loudoun
Road and in the south-west, were no longer service
areas on the edge of the housing, which had moved
beyond them, but pockets classified as 'fairly comfortable, good ordinary earnings'. The earliest developed area, Finchley Road and roads to the east,
were 'wealthy, upper middle- and middle-class',
while the rest of the estate was 'well-to-do, middleclass'. (fn. 60) Inhabitants included Lillie Langtry, a cousin
of the local politician Philip Le Breton, who lived in
Leighton House in Alexandra Road in the 1870s, the
Harmsworth family at no. 94 Boundary Road from
1874 to 1888, and Herbert Spencer, the philosopher,
at no. 64 Avenue Road from 1889 to 1897. (fn. 61) Samuel
Palmer, of the biscuit firm, lived at no. 40 College
Crescent, a large house called Northcourt built in
1881. (fn. 62)
By 1900 lodging houses and institutions had begun
to take over some of the larger houses. In Avenue
Road, for example, Sunnyside was taken for the
Friedenheim hospital (later St. Columba's) in 1892;
the Home Treatment of Disease by Diet was at no.
7, the Yoga School at no. 12, and the Theosophical
Society at no. 19 c. 1903. (fn. 63) In 1908 nine shops were
built in the corner between Finchley and Fairfax
roads. (fn. 64) The general social status of the estate had
declined by 1930. One mews, by then called Fairfax
Place, was singled out as one of the worst parts of
the borough for overcrowding. The other mews areas,
Loudoun Road Mews and the south-west, were
occupied by 'skilled workers and similar', but so,
too, were the whole of Belsize Road, much of
Alexandra Road, and part of Hilgrove Road. The
rest was still middle-class and wealthy. (fn. 65)
The Hampstead portion of St. John's Wood did
not feature in the artistic flowering of the 1930s but
it housed the Hungarian film producer Sir Alexander
Korda at no. 81 Avenue Road from 1933 until
1939. (fn. 66) The estate shared in the flat-building of the
decade. The first major project was the building of
14 blocks by A. Clarke on the south side of Belsize
Road from 1932 to 1936. From 1933 flats replaced
the old houses in St. John's Wood Park and Avenue
Road, including in the south near St. Stephen's
church, a district transferred to Hampstead by
boundary changes, the Poplars estate (1934) and
Avenue Close (1935, by Stanley Hall, Easton &
Robertson); some houses were also built in Avenue
Road in 1935-8. (fn. 67) At the northern end of the estate
New College and much of College Crescent were
pulled down in 1934 and replaced by Northways,
two concrete blocks of flats and shops by London &
City Real Estate. (fn. 68) The whole of the Swiss Cottage
site between Finchley Road and Avenue Road was
redeveloped with the building in 1937 of the Odeon
cinema and, after 1938, of Regency Lodge flats by
R. Atkinson, 'good, though a trifle stodgy'. (fn. 69)
There was extensive rebuilding after 1945, mostly
for local authority housing. The whole area suffered
war damage (fn. 70) and houses were dilapidated through
tenementation and neglect. About 1955 the Communist party designated Bolton Road a black spot
and described the Belsize Road area as overcrowded,
with damp and crumbling houses; there were said to
be 2,372 people in 369 houses. (fn. 71) The L.C.C. acquired land for housing 4,000 people on the west
side of Finchley Road in both Hampstead and
Marylebone in 1946, arousing fierce objections by
its threat to the middle-class character of the neighbourhood. (fn. 72) The whole area around Finchley Road
and Avenue Road was transformed by flats and
and Avenue Road was transformed by flats and public buildings, mostly in the 1960s. Centre Heights, a
concrete and glass block designed by Douglas
Stephen and Panos Koulermos and containing shops,
offices, and flats, was built on the west side of Finchley Road in 1961. (fn. 73) Two special schools, F. D.
Roosevelt and John Keats, were opened in 1957 and
1958 respectively, on the west side of Avenue Road. (fn. 74)
St. John's Wood Park Investment Co. built on 9 a.
facing Boundary Road and St. John's Wood Park
c. 1955 (fn. 75) and two thirteen-storeyed blocks and terraced housing were erected on each side of Boundary
Road between St. John's Wood Park and Finchley
Road in 1962. (fn. 76)
Redevelopment of the site previously occupied by
the school for the blind, St. Columba's hospital, and
the New College Chapel, all on the east side of
Avenue Road, was considered in 1957. A scheme for
a civic centre was published in 1959 by the architect,
Basil Spence, and part of it, the library and the adjoining swimming baths, was opened in 1964. (fn. 77) In
1962 Hampstead theatre opened on a site north of
the library that had been intended for civic buildings. (fn. 78) At the southern end of Avenue Road, St.
Paul's church was replaced by the Polygon flats in
the early 1960s. (fn. 79) During the same period a large
council estate was built on the west side of Finchley
Road, stretching from Boundary Road northward to
Belsize Road and centred on Hilgrove Road from
which it took its name. (fn. 80) Adjoining it on the north
was the Harben council estate, planned between
1954 and 1959 by Norman & Davison for 170 flats. (fn. 81)
The work, which included building five blocks in
Harben Road, itself truncated by the Hilgrove development, and two new closes, Naseby and Marston,
north of Fairfax Road, was not carried out until the
late 1960s. (fn. 82)
In 1954 the borough council planned a modest 22
dwellings in Abbey Road. (fn. 83) In the 1960s, in conjunction with the L.C.C., it rebuilt the entire western portion of the estate, west of Abbey Road, from
which the new development took its name; high-rise
blocks obliterated the street pattern of the old service area. Later phases, by the borough architect
S. A. G. Cook, dated from 1970 and 1973 and included a multi-storeyed car park, shops, a community centre, and health centre in Belsize Road. (fn. 84)
Two large developments in the 1970s have transformed the centre of the area. The G.L.C. built the
Ainsworth estate east of Abbey Road, north of
Boundary Road, mostly by 1970. (fn. 85) Private rebuilding in Alexandra Road aroused considerable opposition and Camden L.B.'s architectural department
took it over in the mid 1970s. Alexandra Road west
of Loudoun Road made way for pedestrian walks
and stepped concrete housing. (fn. 86) Other recent construction has been of pastiche Georgian or Victorian
houses in Fairfax Road and the eastern part of Belsize Road and in Hilgrove Road and of striking
blocks of flats and offices: no. 133 (Cresta House)
Finchley Road (before 1985), (fn. 87) no. 100 Avenue Road
by Levy Benjamin Horvitch (1986), (fn. 88) and the glass
and red painted building at the corner of Finchley
Road and Eton Avenue (1986).
No part of the St. John's Wood estate in Hampstead was included in a conservation area in 1975 (fn. 89)
and only the Swiss Cottage public house, itself much
altered, was among listed buildings. (fn. 90) The overwhelming impression in 1986 was made by flats,
especially by large-scale schemes dating from after
1945. Surprisingly some of the mid-19th century
houses remained, including a dilapidated but handsome terrace in Belgrave Gardens, transferred from
Hampstead to St. Marylebone, and a terrace with
shops on the western side of Abbey Road on the
southern border. Other survivals were mainly on the
better built eastern side of the estate, including most
of the north side of Belsize Road and nos. 11-15
(odd) on the south side at the east end, the southern
side of Hilgrove Road east of Loudoun Road as far
as its turning southward, and several houses in Fairfax Road. Except for the high Gothic red-brick pair,
nos. 22 and 24 Hilgrove Road, all the houses were
stock brick and stuccoed in a classical or Italianate
style similar to those of Belsize or Chalcots.