Nos. 1–5 (consec.) Kensington Palace
Gardens
Nos. 1–3 demolished
Of the five houses built by Samuel W. Strickland
along Bayswater Road only Nos. 4 and 5 remain.
In July 1842 Strickland had applied successfully
to the Commissioners for the plot now occupied
by Nos. 4 and 5, and in August plans and elevations for a pair of semi-detached villas were approved. The architect is unknown: the detailed
specifications submitted to the Commissioners
were signed only by Strickland. By December the
carcase of the building was complete, (ref. 24) but leases
were not executed until March 1843, when, at
Strickland's request, that for No. 5 was granted
to his sister, Elizabeth Strickland. The annual
ground rent for each house was £30. (ref. 62) Both were
occupied by October 1845, No. 4 by Mrs. H. S.
Waring, an elderly annuitant, and No. 5 by
Bevis E. Green, a bookseller and publisher.
No. 4 is now (1972) occupied by the Institute of
Rubber Industry, and No. 5 by the Soviet
Consulate. (ref. 63)
Nos. 4 and 5 form a pair of semi-detached
stucco-faced Italianate houses, consisting of three
storeys over a basement. Originally the composition was symmetrical, the central block being
flanked by the entrance doors and low wings. Its
three-storey façade is five windows wide, with
plain pilasters running through the upper storeys
to support a dentilled cornice and pediment. Some
marble fireplaces dating from the 1840's and a
few original cornices survive inside.
In applying for the plot now occupied by Nos.
4 and 5 Strickland also asked that he should be
given the first refusal of the two adjoining plots
to the east. The Commissioners replied that they
did not intend to allow building on these plots 'at
present', but that they would bear his application
in mind. Five months later Strickland applied
again for these two plots as his financial situation
did not permit him to 'keep the necessary amount
of money unemployed, or invested at a low rate
of interest, upon the doubtful chance of hereafter
becoming the lessee'. (ref. 64) Terms were agreed in
September and as by then it would not have been
possible to roof-over the houses before the winter,
the Commissioners allowed Strickland to defer
submitting plans and elevations until the following spring. (ref. 64)
When the designs were eventually submitted,
in August 1844, Strickland proposed to erect only
one house on the easternmost plot. The architect
of this house (No. 1) was Henry Duesbury, who
had to make extensive changes to his designs to
satisfy the Commissioners. The architect of Nos.
2 and 3 is not known; in September 1843,
however, Strickland had told the Commissioners
that he proposed to build houses here of the same
character as Nos. 4 and 5 and 'only slightly
varied in detail'. (ref. 64) All three houses were completed in carcase by March 1845 (ref. 64) and in September the leases were granted to Strickland. The
annual ground rents were £20, £40 and £60 for
Nos. 2, 3 and I respectively. (ref. 65) No. 2 was first
occupied in 1844 by Strickland himself; No. 3
in 1846 by Samuel Needham, a bank trustee, and
No. 1 in 1846 by Charles Lushington, M. P.,
who was probably responsible for the choice of
Duesbury as architect. (ref. 66) In 1932 The Architectural Review published photographs of the interior
of No. 1 as it had existed in 1893 and after
remodelling by Wells Coates. (ref. 67)
Nos. 6 and 7 Kensington Palace Gardens
Plate 93d
In April 1844 Blashfield had obtained the Commissioners' consent to build one detached house
here to designs by T. H. Wyatt and D. Brandon,
but this house had evidently not been started when
he agreed to sell the site for £750 to Joseph
Earle of Brixton, a timber merchant. (ref. 36) Subsequently an 'amended plan' for building 'two houses
or a double house' on the site, with new designs
by Wyatt and Brandon, was submitted by Blashfield, on Earle's behalf, in July 1844 and approved
by the Commissioners in August. (ref. 68)
(ref. a)
The carcase of the building was completed by
February 1845 and in March separate leases were
granted to Earle at an annual rent of £40 for
each house. (ref. 69) While work was in progress a
number of alterations to the architects' designs
were approved by the Commissioners, including
the addition of 'an enriched parapet to surmount
the cornice along the whole line of the front'. (ref. 26)
Both houses were finished by April 1846. (ref. 26) Earle
himself was the first occupant of No. 6 where he
lived from 1846 to 1856. No. 7 was first occupied
in 1847 by Anselmo de Arroyave, a Spanish-born
merchant. (ref. 63)
The front of Nos. 6 and 7 is a pleasant, wellmannered, symmetrical composition in the Italianate style, crowned by the 'enriched parapet' (of
unusual star-shaped design), the dies of which were
formerly surmounted by statuary. Both houses
are faced with stucco and were originally of three
storeys over basements, the fourth storey of No. 7
being added in 1863 from the designs of D.
Brandon. (ref. 70) The entrances are on the north and
south sides, within porches. The interiors have
been much altered.
No. 8 Kensington Palace Gardens
Plates 92b, 92c. Demolished
This house, the first to be built by Blashfield,
was erected in 1843–6 to the designs of Owen
Jones, whose plans and elevations were submitted
for approval in October 1843. The Commissioners' architects reported that 'as regards the
Elevations . . . the Design will probably produce
an appearance equal to that originally contemplated for this Site and we do not feel we
ought to object to the peculiarity of the proposed
Moresque enrichments though hitherto not much
adopted in this Country'. Blashfield replied that
'The Moresque ornament of the windows might
be removed (probably with advantage) by the
stroke of a pencil. The design would then be
strictly Italian and as I wish.' Jones's mildly
'Moresque' details were, however, retained (ref. 26)
(ref. b)
(Plate 92b). Even without them the design would
have been unusual; in particular the fenestration
of the upper storeys and the large expanses of
plain wall gave No. 8 an exotic quality reminiscent
of a Black Sea resort.
When the house was finished The Illustrated
London News commented that its 'Byzantine
character, . . . although novel to this country
appears to be more particularly suited to our
climate and domestic comforts than most others'. (ref. 34)
Nevertheless it remained untenanted until March
1852, when a Mrs. Caroline Murray of Maida
Vale bought the house for £6,300 from Blashfield's mortgagees, who had provided the £15,000
originally required to build it. (ref. 43)
The house as it stood was too large for Mrs
Murray, and in the opinion of her architects,
F. and H. Francis, it was much too big even for
'the generality of families—a fact proved by the
length of time it has remained unoccupied'. Mrs.
Murray therefore divided it into two, having first
built an extension on the south side designed by
her architects in a matching style. (ref. 72) The southern
half, first occupied in 1853 by Mrs. Murray herself, was hereafter called No. 8A, and the northern
half No. 8. The latter was first occupied in 1854
by Russell Gurney, barrister and Recorder of
London. Subsequently a number of additions, all
more or less in a matching style externally, were
made to both halves of the building (Plate 92c). (ref. 73)
After the war of 1939–45 (when it had been
used for the interrogation of spies), the house was
in a dilapidated state, and the Crown Estate Commissioners, who were anxious to preserve the
building, could find nobody who wanted it either
as a private residence, or for conversion to other
use. In 1955, however, a developer was found to
convert the house into seven 'high class' flats,
but before the work could be carried out another
developer took over and his architects, Richard
Selfert and Partners, advised that the existing
structure was unsafe. In 1961 the Commissioners
somewhat reluctantly agreed to allow the developer to demolish the house and erect a block
of luxury flats. (ref. 74)
No. 9 Kensington Palace Gardens:
Plate 104. 104d
This house was built in 1852–4 for Anselmo
de Arroyave, a Spanish-born merchant who had
occupied No. 7 Kensington Palace Gardens since
1847. Arroyave offered the Commissioners an
annual ground rent of £70 10s. for the site;
Pennethorne recommended this offer in April
1852, and in May an agreement was concluded
by which Arroyave undertook to spend at least
£4,000 in building a first-rate house to be completed by 5 April 1854. (ref. 75) The house was designed
by Sydney Smirke, whose plans and elevations
were submitted to the Commissioners in July
1852 and approved by them, after alterations, in
September. Smirke said that he intended to treat
all four fronts 'similarly and uniformly', and consequently the Commissioners made it a condition
of their approval that no other buildings would be
permitted to intrude on the open space around the
house. (ref. 75) The contractors were Lucas Brothers,
who had submitted the lowest tender at £4,280. (ref. 76)
Building began in about November 1852 and by
October 1854 Arroyaye was living in the house. (ref. 77)
The ground lease was granted to him in June
1855. (ref. 78)
It appears from the existence of a few working
drawings that Alfred Stevens designed some of the
original interior decorations, but none of these
survives. (ref. 79) The most substantial subsequent alterations have been the addition of an attic (in 1866)
and the extensions on the north and south sides.
The attic was designed by William Thompson
for Charles F. Huth, a 'commission merchant',
who occupied the house from 1866 until 1895. (ref. 80)
No. 9 is a stucco-faced house consisting of a
basement, three storeys, and an attic, the latter
largely concealed behind the balustrade. Only the
symmetrical west façade survives in basically its
original form (Plate 104c). It is three windows
wide, and has large plain quoins. The fenestration
is unusual: two square windows, flanking the
entrance, project from the main façade on the
ground floor only. The antae on either side of
each window are decorated with pilasters of an
amalgamated Tuscan and Roman Doric order,
and each window, between the antae, is subdivided by two slender cast-iron columns supported
on the sills, the central window being twice as
wide as those between the iron columns and the
antae. The main entrance is, in effect, distyle in
antis, the columns being of the same order as the
pilasters. The whole projection on the ground
floor is crowned by a plain cornice surmounted by
a balustrade at first-floor level. This cornice is
continued round the house.
Each of the three identical first-floor windows
consists of an aediculated opening, with a segmental pediment over a plain entablature carried
on two slender cast-iron columns. The three
second-floor windows, above a simple stringcourse
that extends round the building, have moulded
architraves with crossettes. The facade is surmounted by a dentilled cornice with lions' masks
fixed to the cyma recta moulding, the whole being
crowned by a stucco balustrade, the dies of which
support stucco balls.
The plan was originally symmetrical, the rooms
being grouped on either side of the staircase and
entrance hall. The walls of the latter are plastered
to resemble ashlar work, and four painted panels,
depicting cherubic subjects, are set above the
doorways right and left. The most important
room is the main drawing-room (Plate 104d),
to the right of the entrance hall, which extends
the full depth of the house. The walls are lined
with finely carved and gilded wooden panels of
the Louis Quinze period, inserted in 1938, the
cartouches depicting varieties of game. (ref. 81) There are
marble fireplaces surmounted by pier-glasses.
Other marble fireplaces of good quality exist in
the dining-room, and in the conference-room on
the first floor.
The house is now (1972) occupied by the
Indian High Commissioner.
No. 10 Kensington Palace Gardens
Plates 100, 101
This house, now considerably altered, was designed in the manner of an Italian palazzo by
Philip Hardwick for Sutherland Hall Sutherland,
esquire, of Princes Street, Hanover Square, who
bought the site from Blashfield in 1846. Hardwick's plans and elevations (Plate 100) were
submitted to the Commissioners on 22 October
1846 and approved by them on 28 October,
Pennethorne having reported that the house,
'although only two stories high above the ground
& therefore not of the same large scale with
other Houses built along this Road . . . will in
every respect fulfill the Conditions of Mr
Blashfield's Agreement'. (ref. 82)
Building began at the end of 1846 and because
of a misunderstanding over the terms under which
Sutherland had taken the plot the Commissioners
allowed him an extra year in which to complete
the house, provided that the exterior was finished
and 'rendered to all appearances habitable' and the
gardens laid out by October 1847. (ref. 83) The lease
was not executed until September 1848, and at
Sutherland's nomination it was granted to Charles
James Heath of New London Street, Fenchurch
Street. (ref. 84) But Heath did not occupy the house
himself, and it remained untenanted until James
Meadows Rendel, the civil engineer, acquired the
lease in 1851. (ref. 85)
Before Rendel moved into the house, probably
early in 1852, it was altered for him by Banks
and Barry. These alterations included the insertion of a number of round-headed dormer
windows, of which Rendel wrote 'the design has
the approval and indeed originated with Mr
Barry Junior'. Pennethorne advised the Commissioners to consent but considered that 'the
exterior will be somewhat injured'. (ref. 86)
Rendel died here in 1856 and in 1862 the house
was acquired by Ernest Leopold S. Benzon, a
German-born steel magnate, to whose elaborate
dinner parties came many of the leading artists,
writers and musicians of the day. Benzon began
extensive alterations to the house to the designs
of Paul Jumelin and Lawrence Harvey, but on
his death in 1873 they were discontinued. (ref. 87)
In 1896 substantial alterations designed by
Leonard Stokes were made for the financier
Leopold Hirsch. Stokes had submitted plans for a
very elaborate remodelling in December 1895,
which were warmly welcomed by the Commissioners' architect, Arthur Cates, who thought
they would have 'converted this house into a small
palace'. They were, however, replaced by designs
for less elaborate, though still extensive, alterations. Their principal features, in so far as they
affected the external appearance of the house, were
the addition of a mansard roof, square attic
windows, a balustrade above the cornice, a onestorey extension on the north side and a new porch.
The proportions of some windows were altered
and all windows were fitted with small-pane
sashes. The walls, which had originally been faced
with white bricks and Portland stone dressings,
were rendered with stone-coloured Portland
cement (Plate 101a, 101b). Inside, major alterations
were made on every floor, including the formation
of a round-ended billiard-room on the ground
floor, which projects in a semi-circular extension
on the south side. (ref. 88)
Further alterations were made for Hirsch in
1903–4 by Messrs. Fryer and Company. An
extra storey was added to the north side extension
and a pedimented attic storey to the centre of the
west front (Plate 101a). (ref. 89)
The house is now (1972) occupied by the
Soviet Diplomatic Mission.
No. 11 Kensington Palace Gardens
Plate 105; fig. 33
This house was built in 1852–4 for Don Cristobal
de Murrietta, an elderly Spanish-born merchant
who had occupied No. 26 Kensington Palace
Gardens since 1845. (ref. 90) Murrietta had applied for
the plot, for which he offered an annual ground
rent of £92, through his son Mariano. Pennethorne recommended his offer, and in May 1852
an agreement was concluded with Mariano who
undertook to spend at least £4,000 in building a
first-class house, and to complete it by 5 April
1854. (ref. 75)
The architect was Sydney Smirke, whose plans
and elevations for the house were submitted to the
Commissioners in July 1852 and approved by them
in September. Smirke proposed to treat all four
sides of the building 'similarly and uniformly',
and the Commissioners made it a condition of their
approval that the ground around the house should
be kept free of buildings. (ref. 75) The contractors were
Lucas Brothers, whose tender, at £5,200, was
the lowest submitted. (ref. 76) Building began in about
November 1852 and by June 1855, when the
ground lease was granted to Mariano and his
brother José, Don Cristobal was living in the
house. (ref. 91)
Some of the original interior decorations were
designed by Alfred Stevens. In the drawing-room
the principal feature of his scheme was a series of
canvas panels painted with figures depicting
heroines from The Facrie Queene. These panels
were attached to the wall above eye level within
fanciful frames painted on to the wall surface.
In the morning-room Stevens designed the ceiling,
which was painted with small figures emblematic
of the four seasons. None of these decorations
now survives. Stevens's biographer, H. Stannus,
who must have seen the panels in situ, regarded
them as among Stevens's most important works,
and in 1891 he urged that they 'should be secured
for the nation if the present owner should ever
part with his interest in the house'. (ref. 92)
(fn. c)
The original house has been considerably
altered. In 1873 a one-storey ball-room and art
gallery was added to the south side for José de
Murrietta by the architect Edward Tarver, who
had designed a house for the family at Wadhurst
in Sussex in 1872. The west elevation of this
extension was originally treated in a free Baroque
manner which Tarver thought would reduce its
apparent width, thereby helping to preserve the
detached appearance of the house. In 1874
Tarver designed the present high-pitched châteaulike roof after the original roof (which was partially hidden behind a balustrade) and top storey
were destroyed in a fire. The Commissioners'
architect, Arthur Cates, was reluctant to approve
Tarver's designs; he would have preferred a
mansard roof, but after many modifications Cates
eventually recommended the design to the Commissioners, although in his opinion 'it was not free
from eccentricity'. (ref. 98) In 1894 a one-bay three
storey extension was added to the north side for
R. W. Perks, M. P., from the designs of Charles
Bell. (ref. 24)

Figure 33:
No. 11 Kensington Palace Gardens, ground-floor
plan in 1855.
In 1937 the interior was redecorated for the
Duke of Marlborough by Lenygon and Morant,
and before the work was carried out the Commissioners ordered a photographic survey. (ref. 96) This
shows that a number of rooms had elaborate
embellishments, although in the drawing-room
Stevens's panels (but not his painted ceiling
decorations) had already disappeared. In the ballroom the shallow domes of the ceiling (now
removed) and the friezes were painted with arabesque ornaments. The dining-room frieze was
painted with panels of figures and animals and the
ceiling with floral patterns, and in the first-floor
room over the hall the coving was painted with
birds and flowers and the ceiling with an oval
panel representing the sky. In this room also was
a fine carved fireplace and chimneypiece incorporating decorative tiles. Some of this work had
been executed by Walter Crane, who in his
Reminiscences recalled that in about 1873–4 'Mr
E. J. Tarver, an architect . . . got me to design
and paint a frieze in panels of animals and birds
for a house in Palace Gardens'. (ref. 96)
Another single-storey extension was added to
the north side in 1947–8 for the French Embassy,
and at the same time considerable alterations were
made to the interior. (ref. 97) The house is now (1972)
the residence of the French Ambassador.
In its elevational treatment this house has
certain similarities to No. 9, although the stucco
detail is richer. Both the west and east fronts of
the original house were symmetrical, but the
extensions to the north and south have considerably unbalanced the design.
The house is stucco-faced and consists of three
storeys over a basement, with an attic. The front
is a composition of some distinction, and has a
porch, carried on two pairs of fluted Corinthian
columns, surmounted by a balustrade. On either
side of this porch, but, unlike No. 9, not attached
to it, are two square projections containing
windows, their antae enriched by fluted Corinthian pilasters supporting plain entablatures surmounted by balustrades (Plate 105a).
The three widely proportioned first-floor
windows of the original house each have two
slender cast-iron columns supporting the entablature. The two outer windows have pediments
above containing simple cartouches. The secondfloor windows are surrounded by moulded
architraves with crossettes above a simple stringcourse. The house has plain quoins and is
crowned by a rich entablature, with an anthemion
frieze and dentilled cornice. There are dolphins'
masks on the cyma. Above the cornice is the attic
added by Tarver in 1874, which consists of tall
aediculated dormers surmounted by segmental
pediments. The dormers in the centre are combined within a Mannerist composition crowned
by a pediment. The balustrade between the
dormers has open fret patterns instead of balusters,
and the dies carry swagged urns. The tall roofs,
together with the dormers and urns, give this
house a distinctive Parisian appearance.
The garden front has three French windows,
opening to a terrace, flanked by two three-sided
bay windows (Plate 105b). The first floor has
aediculated windows, with cartouches in the pediments. The side windows are widely proportioned,
similar to those on the front already described.
The second-floor windows have moulded and
crossetted architraves, and the entablature and
main cornice are carried round from the front.
The attic is treated in a similar fashion to that on
the front.
The single-storey extensions to the north and
south (the latter altered) both have Corinthian
pilasters supporting plain entablatures and crowning balustrades.
The interior plan is spacious, and the proportions of the rooms very pleasing. The entrance
hall, off which are the library and cloakrooms,
leads to a cross-passage containing the stairs.
The floor of the hall and passage was laid with
black and white marble in 1937 (ref. 95) (Plate 105c). A
large doorway with a cornice carried on large
consoles in the Florentine Renaissance manner
leads to the main drawing-room, which is
decorated in pale cream, with gilded Rococo
mouldings featuring feathers, leaves, swags, and
flower motifs (Plate 105d). The cove contains
figures and swags in low relief. The little drawingroom, to the north of the main room, has more
elaborate Rococo decor based on marine motifs.
This room gives access to the long dining-room,
situated in the most recent extension. The drawing-rooms also extend into what was the ballroom
built in 1873. There are now mirrored doors in
marble architraves surmounted by pediments,
with circular wheel-pattern mirrors over them. <No. 11 was very severely damaged by fire during refurbishment in December 1990, when its roof and top floor were destroyed.>
No. 12 Kensington Palace Gardens
Plates 94, 95; fig. 34
The building of this handsome house was begun
by Thomas Grissell and his partner (Sir) Samuel
Morton Peto and completed by Grissell alone
after the dissolution of their partnership in March
1846 (see page 158). The plans and elevations
were submitted to Pennethorne on 13 February
1845 together with those for No. 20, and in an
accompanying letter the builders asked that they
should not be 'strictly' bound by the designs,
althought they had 'no intention of departing from
them essentially'. Pennethorne reported that
both sets of plans were 'unexceptionable', and,
'considering (as I believe) that they emanate from
Mr Barry and are to be built by Messrs Grissell
& Peto', he thought the Commissioners would
'probably be willing to allow them to deviate as
they request'. On 19 February the Commissioners
gave their consent. (ref. 37)
The Companion to the British Almanac for
1846, which published an illustration as well as a
brief description of the finished house, 'understood' that the architect had been Robert Richardson Banks. Banks was a pupil of (Sir) Charles
Barry and was at this time the architect in charge
of Barry's office. (ref. 39) No doubt he was involved in
the production of working drawings for the house
and he may have supervised the construction. (ref. 40)
While building was in progress Grissell and
Peto acquired the vacant adjoining plot to the
south (now the site of No. 12A), where they proposed to lay out a garden to be leased with No. 12.
The Commissioners gave their consent, the
builders having spent on No. 12 over £6,000,
which was the minimum that they would have
been required to spend on building a house on
each site, and in May 1847 both plots were
granted to Grissell in a single lease at an annual
rent of £185. The lease also included a stable in
the mews. (ref. 98)
Although No. 12 was variously reported as
'finished' in April 1846 and 'nearly ready for
habitation' in May, it remained unlet (though
probably not unoccupied) until 1853, when Peto
took an under-lease from his former partner. (ref. 99)
(fn. d)
Since the dissolution of their partnership Peto,
with his brother-in-law, Edward Ladd Betts, had
pursued the career of a railway contractor, and in
1847 he had entered Parliament. (ref. 101) At the time
of the census of 1861 Peto's household was the
largest in Kensington Palace Gardens, comprising twenty-eight occupants, of whom sixteen
were servants. Lack of accommodation could not,
however, have been the reason why, two years
later, he decided to build himself another larger
house in the garden alongside No. 12, for his first
intention then had been to move to a smaller house
in Carlton Gardens. (ref. 102)
Before Peto moved into his new house (now
No. 12A), No. 12 was sold by his mortgagees for
£25,000 to Alexander Collie of Sussex Gardens,
Bayswater, a London and Manchester cotton
merchant, and in 1864 Collie spent several
thousand pounds on alterations designed by
Matthew Digby Wyatt. The principal staircase
was extended to the second floor, a new breakfastroom was built at the north-east corner, matching
the conservatory which Peto had added at the
south-east corner, and a new billiard-room,
decorated in the 'Moorish' taste, was constructed
in the former kitchen. Outside, the chimneystacks were raised and the second-floor windows
at the back were lengthened and fitted with iron
and stone balconettes. (ref. 103)
(fn. e)
Collie occupied No. 12 from 1865 until the
bankruptcy of his business in 1875. He was prosecuted for obtaining £200,000 from a bank by
false pretences, broke bail and disappeared. In
September 1875 The Times reported that hope of
recapturing him had not been abandoned, but by
1878 he had still not been re-arrested. In 1875
his creditors had expected the house to realize
about £15,000, but ten years elapsed before it was
occupied again. (ref. 105)
The house is still in private occupation.
No. 12 was aptly described by the writer in
the Companion as having 'in its general aspect
quite as much or even more of the club-house
than the usual villa character, it being altogether
in that astylar Italian palazzon mode which Barry
introduced among us in the club-houses built by
him'. (ref. 106) The design is, indeed, not only similar
in its general outlines to Barry's Italianate clubhouses in Pall Mall, but also has some close
parallels of detail: the unusual relationship of
solid and void at the back recalls the garden front
of the 'Travellers' Club, and the sumptuous
cornicione is very similar to that on the Reform
Club.
The house is of three storeys over a basement,
five windows wide, with a central doorway, and is
flanked by one-storey wings over basements. The
front is nobly proportioned, with window openings
on the ground and first floors treated in the
manner of Michelangelo (Plate 94a). The groundfloor windows are surrounded by architraves and
surmounted by segmental pediments on brackets.
The main entrance has a round-headed arch with
a large keystone, set between engaged Ionic
columns which carry an entablature. There is a
stringcourse enriched with lattice-work at firstfloor level. The north wing contains a niche
within an architrave over which is a cornice
carried on brackets, while in the south wing the
niche has been replaced by a window. The firstfloor window-openings have architraves and are
surmounted by cornices carried on brackets. The
second-floor windows have crossetted architraves
only. The house is crowned by a cornicione enriched with guilloche carving, dentils, reel-andbead and egg-and-dart mouldings, brackets, and
dolphins' masks on the cymatium (fig. 34).

Figure 34:
No. 12 Kensington Palace Gardens, front elevation, plans and details
At the back, the three middle windows are
closely spaced together (Plate 94c). The groundfloor windows and French doors all have roundarched heads, and the architraves and archivolts
have rusticated blocks and voussoirs, with large
keystones. The first-floor windows rise from the
lattice-work stringcourse, each having architraves
with three large rusticated blocks, and keystones.
They are surmounted by plain cornices carried on
brackets. The lengthened second-floor windows,
with the iron and stone balconettes of 1864, now
give a top-heavy appearance to this façade. The
two single-storey wings flanking the house each
have three high round-headed windows organized
as arcades with moulded archivolts and plain keystones.
The plan of the house is almost symmetrical
(fig. 34). The walls of the entrance hall are
plastered to simulate ashlar work, and the columns
are of the Ionic order (Plate 94b). The corridors
to the north and south are vaulted. The floor is
of stone, with black marble inlay. There is a
stone stair to the first floor, with cast-iron
balustrade.
Immediately to the south of the entrance hall
is the library (Plate 95c), fitted out with shelves,
cupboards, and inlaid doors. There are panels of
carved wood over the doors and bookshelves, and
the fireplace and overmantel, crowned by a
broken segmental pediment, are carved with
Florentine and Baroque motifs. The woodwork
of this room is markedly similar to that of the
staircase from the first to the second floor. The
plaster ceiling of the library is ornamented with
strapwork in the Jacobean manner. These decorations and fittings probably all date from 1864.
Among the other rooms, pride of place must be
given to the billiard- (now flower-) room designed
by M. D. Wyatt (Plate 95d). This is a rich and
glittering invention in the Moresque style, with a
brightly coloured glazed-tile dado above which
is a cornice carried on carved brackets. Over this
is an arcade on colonnettes of marbles, behind which
is a series of mirrors. The coved ceiling, decorated
with arabesques, is open in the centre and supports
a clerestory pierced by eight-pointed star-shaped
lights. This clerestory is decorated with intricate
geometrical patterns based on Islamic motifs. The
colours are varied and strong, and the gilding is
lavish.
The drawing-room, which faces the garden to
the east and gives access to the terrace, is subdivided into three parts by unfluted marbled
Corinthian columns supporting a modillioned
cornice (Plate 95a). In the dining-room (Plate
95b) the original deeply moulded ceiling survives. <The walls of the first-floor rooms above the drawing-room are supported on original iron girders.>
No. 12A Kensington Palace Gardens
Plate 127c
This house was erected in 1863–5 for Sir Samuel
Morton Peto in the garden of No. 12, the house
which he had occupied since 1854. The site,
although originally intended as a building plot,
had been granted to Peto's former partner,
Thomas Grissell, in the lease of No. 12 in May
1847 (see above). But the right of the lessee
subsequently to erect a house here had not been
extinguished, and in April 1863 Peto, who had
agreed to purchase the ground lease from Grissell,
informed the Commissioners that his architect,
James Murray, would soon be submitting plans
and elevations for their approval. Although Peto
did not tell the Commissioners his reasons for
giving up No. 12 he explained to them that his
decision to build a new house here was in deference to his wife's wish to remain in Kensington
Palace Gardens; he himself had proposed to move
to Carlton Gardens. (ref. 107)
Murray's plans and elevations were examined
by Pennethorne on 30 April 1863 and approved
by the Commissioners on the following day.
Subsequently a number of small adjustments were
made to the design, apparently at Murray's request. (ref. 108) The contractors were Lucas Brothers, an
important firm of builders whose two partners,
Thomas and Charles Lucas, had been on Peto's
staff during his partnership with Grissell. (ref. 109) The
internal decorations were designed by Owen
Jones and executed by Messrs. Jackson and
Graham, who were also entrusted with the
furnishings. Other decorative work was executed
by Messrs. Minton (encaustic and majolica tiles
for the conservatory and Roman mosaic pavements in the central hall and vestibules), and
Messrs. Elkington (Griotte marble columns with
bronze bases and capitals in the hall). The extensive and elaborate stables erected by Lucas's and
fitted up by Burton of Oxford Street were in
Kensington Mall. (fn. f) According to The Builder the
total cost was between £45,000 and £50,000. (ref. 110)
Peto had moved into his new house by June
1865, but he did not live there long. (ref. 111) In May
1866 the financial crisis precipitated by the
collapse of the bill discounting firm of Overend,
Gurney and Company forced his own firm, Peto
and Betts, to suspend payment, and he gave up the
house. (ref. 112)
(fn. g) In 1867 Peto and Betts were declared
bankrupt and although their affairs were finally
settled satisfactorily the firm never recovered.
No. 12A meanwhile had been acquired by (Sir)
Thomas Lucas, one of the partners in the firm
which built it, and he lived there from 1866 until
his death in 1902. (ref. 114) It was for Lucas that the
single-storey picture gallery, designed in a matching style by W. J. Green, was erected on the
north side in 1876. (ref. 115)
The house is now (1972) occupied by the Royal
Nepalese Embassy.
No. 12A is a substantial house, faced with stone
on the west and east elevations, and consists of
three storeys over a basement, with and attic.
It is seven windows wide in front, with the singlestorey wing of 1876 to the north and a small
conservatory to the south. On each side of the
three centre windows is a three-sided bay window
rising through two storeys.
The restrained treatment of the principal
façades is enhanced by the fine quality of the
carved stonework. There are quoins, and a
principal modillioned cornice with an anthemion
frieze, the whole surmounted by a balustrade
(Plate 107c). Two other cornices are provided at
the first-and second-floor levels, the former being
plain, with a Greek-key frieze, and the latter being
dentilled, with a guilloche frieze. Elaborately
carved stone panels are set above the ground-floor
windows. The house has been redecorated several
times, and (as far as is known) nothing of Jones's
original scheme survives. (ref. 116)
The stables in Kensington Mall included living
quarters, room for nine coaches, and twelve stalls
opening into a central two-storied nave with
arched roof on iron columns. (ref. 110)
No. 13 Kensington Palace Gardens: Harrington House
Plate 103; fig. 35
In March 1851 the fifth Earl of Harrington, an important landowner in South Kensington who had
succeeded to the title only a few weeks previously,
applied to the Commissioners for a large vacant
plot on the east side of Kensington Palace Gardens
where he wished to build a house for his own
occupation. (fn. h) The Commissioners replied that
although they could not accommodate the Earl
on the terms which he proposed (a ninety-nineyear lease at £120 a year) they would be willing
to let the site to him at £147 a year for a period
expiring in 1942, subject to his spending not less
than £6,000 in building a first-class house to be
completed by 5 January 1853. Lord Harrington
agreed on condition that he should be allowed to
build the house in his favourite style—the Gothic.
Pennethorne reported favourably on the designs
and on 12 July the Commissioners gave their
consent. (ref. 117)
(fn. i) The contractor was John Baker of
Marylebone, who applied for permission to lay
the drains in August and began building in
October. (ref. 118) Lord Harrington was living in the
house by July 1853, and in December 1854 he was
granted the lease. (ref. 119)
The architectural authorship of the design for
No. 13 was described by The Builder in 1852 as
follows: 'The original design for the exterior was
made by Mr. Burton, to suit plans sketched by
the Earl, but the works are being carried out under
the superintendence of Mr. C. J. Richardson.' (ref. 120)
Another contemporary journal named 'Mr
Burton' (i. e. Decimus Burton) as the author of
the design but there is no mention of him or any
other architect in the Commissioners' records,
nor have any of the original drawings been
found. (ref. 121) Probably both Burton and the Earl
made sketches and suggestions, but left the details
and working drawings to Richardson, who
was surveyor to Lord Harrington's South Kensington estate, and under whose name views of
the house were exhibited at the Royal Academy
in 1852 and 1855. (ref. 123) After Lord Harrington's
death (in 1862) Richardson did acknowledge that
"The fronts of the building were designed in great
measure by his late Lordship', but his account of
the house in his book Picturesque Designs . . .
(1870) seems to imply that he alone was responsible for the design. (ref. 124)
In this account Richardson admitted that the
exterior of the building had been 'censured on
account of the Gothic outline being too flat, the
roofs too low, and all the windows having common sash frames'. The windows were, indeed,
particularly singled out for criticism. The Builder
found them 'more eccentric than beautiful' (ref. 120)
and the Campaines to the British Almanac, 'by
no means elegant'. (ref. 121)
The Builder, which had
described the design as 'somewhat German in
character', subsequently published a scathing
attack by an anonymous correspondent: 'Were I
to express my opinion of it without reserve, I
should be compelled to make use of language and
epithets which, however justly merited, would be
deemed as illiberal as they would be disagreeable. . . . Instead of "repose" we have actual
torture— the very thumhscrew of design. ' (ref. 126)
Richardson defended the building on the grounds
of 'convenience, comfort, and complete suitability
for all domestic purposes', and he quoted letters
from Lord Harrington congratulating him on
having constructed a house 'without a fault.
He justified the design of the windows on the
ground that 'it may be considered very probable
that if the Gothic race of architects had continued
with us to the present day, they would have
adopted plate glass for their windows, and put
aside their lead-lights and small panes of common glass'. (ref. 126)
No. 13 is one of the biggest houses in the road,
and was said to have cost the Earl about £15,000,
although according to Richardson 'as little expense in decoration was gone into as possible',
The original interior was apparently 'very plain',
most of the rooms being only ornamented by a
plain cornice of 'running Gothic mouldings'.
The saloon (Plate 103b), however, was more
elaborately treated, and had a coved ceiling painted
with shields, coats of arms, mottoes and monograms. (ref. 126)

Figure 35:
No. 13 Kensington Palace Gardens, original ground-floor plan
After Lord Harrington's death his widow continued to occupy the house until her death in
1898. (ref. 127) In 1924 it was acquired by Sir Lewis
Richardson, a South African merchant, who in
that year spent over £25,000 on alterations
designed for him by Sidney Parvin. The whimsical
bell-turret was removed, new steps were added at
both front and back, and a wooden porch was
erected in front. The windows of the conservatory were altered and its original sloping roof
replaced by the present flat one. Considerable
changes were made inside, many of which survive. (ref. 128) The house is now (1972) occupied by the
Soviet Embassy.
It is constructed of buff-coloured bricks with
Bath stone dressings, and consists of two principal
storeys over a basement, which is fourteen feet
high and of fireproof construction, with a partstorey above, which originally contained the
female servants' sleeping quarters.
Despite the loss of its bell-turret the threestorey central tower containing the main entrance
still dominates the symmetrical west façade
(Plate 103a, 103c). Above the entrance is a projecting
oriel window surmounted by a quatrefoil parapet,
and below the central window is a panel now
bearing Sir Lewis Richardson's arms. The sashwindow openings are rectangular, the only concession to period style being some idiomatic
cusping at the corners and the drip moulds over
some of the windows. At the corners of the
building are diagonal buttresses of stone on brick
piers. The house is crowned by an open parapet
of crude 'Gothic' design. On the south side of the
house is the conservatory, contained in a singlestorey extension over a basement.
Inside, a small entrance hall, flanked by the
former library and dining-room, leads to the
saloon (fig. 35). The latter forms the heart of the
house and is two storeys high, illuminated by a
skylight in which are the remains of embossed
and coloured glass depicting heraldic devices. The
present double oak staircase in the saloon, in a late
seventeenth-century style, replaced the original
stone stair in 1924, when the walls were panelled
in oak, and new landings supported on steel
cantilevers with oak balustrades were fixed
around three sides of the room. None of the
original decorations appear to survive in the
principal rooms on the ground floor. These were
originally warmed with hot-water pipes covered by
ornamental iron grilles.
The spacious domestic accommodation originally provided in the basement, which extends under
the courtyard on the south side of the house,
included a kitchen, scullery, pastry-room, stillroom, dairy, wash-houses, laundry, butler's
pantry, steward's room, servants' hall, men's
sleeping-room, wine cellars, furnace, cart sheds,
cowhouse, dung-pit, coach-house, coal cellars,
dust-pit and closets. (ref. 129)
No. 14 Kensington Palace Gardens
Plate 102; fig. 36
In March 1845 Blashfield submitted plans and
elevations for a house designed by T. Hayter
Lewis which he proposed to erect on the southernmost of his plots on the east side of the road. In
an accompanying letter Blashfield wrote that
'The style here attempted is Venetian and treated
much after the manner of Sansovini [sic] the
architect for the Library of St. Mark's, Venice'.
According to The Builder a view of the garden
front exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1845
showed that the proposed house had 'an arcade
in front of both of the two principal floors'. (ref. 130) The
Commissioners approved the design, but the plot
was still vacant when Blashfield became bankrupt
in May 1847. (ref. 44)
The present No. 14 occupies a little over half
of Blashfield's original plot and was erected in
1850–1 under an agreement between the Commissioners and Edmund Antrobus of the Strand,
a tea merchant. In November 1849 Antrobus
had applied to lease 100 or 120 feet of the original
170-foot frontage of the plot, for which he
offered a rental of 15s. a foot. This was less than
Blashfield had paid, but Pennethorne advised the
Commissioners to accept Antrobus's offer. (ref. 55)
The house was designed and built by Thomas
Cubitt. Pennethorne thought the designs (Plate
102a, b) compared unfavourably with other
houses in the road; 'the Architecture of the fronts',
he wrote, 'would be much inferior to those built
by Mr Grissell and other gentlemen'. But
Antrobus was unwilling to incur a large expenditure, and as the building would not cost less than
the £3,000 which he had agreed to spend,
Pennethorne felt obliged to recommend the
design to the Commissioners. (ref. 131) Building began
in May 1850 and by June 1851 the house was
occupied. (ref. 132) The lease, for 100 feet of frontage
at an annual rent of £75, was granted to Antrobus
in January 1852. (ref. 133)

Figure 36:
No. 14 Kensington Palace Gardens, front elevation in
1855, 1887 and 1908, and ground-floor plan in 1855
Antrobus lived here until his death in 1886,
when the ground lease was sold at auction for
£8,100 to Henry Solomon of Inverness Terrace,
Bayswater. In 1887 substantial alterations were
made for Solomon from the designs of N. S. Joseph
and Smithern. An extra storey and attic were
added, the interior remodelled and the elevations
worked over in a French Rennaissance manner
(fig. 36). The Commissioners' architect, Arthur
Cates, welcomed these changes: 'they will make
the house worthy of its position and remove some
of its grave defects'. The present front elevation
(Plate 102c) was designed by White, Allom and
Company in 1908 for Solomon's son. (ref. 134) At the
back the stucco-dressed white-brick façade of the
original design can still be discerned, despite the
additions of 1887, and of a bay window designed
by Cubitt in 1855 (Plate 102d).
Inside, almost every trace of the original decorations has been removed, except for the cast-iron
balusters of the stair. The living-room, which
extends from the front of the house to the rear,
now has an acanthus-leaf cornice and two Ionic
columns that support a beam dividing the room
into two compartments. The dining-room, in the
north-east of the ground floor, is in the late
seventeenth-century manner, the doorways having
ornate carved architraves surmounted by broken
pediments.
The house is now (1972) occupied by the
Finnish Ambassador.
Nos. 15 and 15B Kensington Palace Gardens
Plates 106, 107a; fig. 37
In March 1852 Frederick Chinnock of Regent
Street, an auctioneer, applied successfully to the
Commissioners for a lease of the southernmost
plot on the east side of The Queen's Road, one of
two sites which they had made available for building only recently (see page 160). Terms were
agreed but in January 1853 Chinnock relinquished his interest: his reasons included 'the
greatly increased cost of building within the last
few months', and the fact that the site was overlooked by the palace stables. Thereupon Pennethorne asked the next applicant to make an offer.
This was S. W. Strickland, the builder of Nos.
1–5 Kensington Palace Gardens. He offered a
rental of £130 a year for the plot, which was to
include an adjoining piece of land to the north,
originally intended to be laid out as a roadway,
but then let (as was the original building plot
itself) to the occupant of No. 14, on a quarterly
tenancy. This offer was accepted and by an agreement of February 1853 Strickland underlook to
spend not less than £6,000 in building two firstrate houses here, to be completed by 10 October
1855. (ref. 135)
Almost immediately Thomas Grissell, the
builder who lived at No. 19, made inquiries which
led Strickland to believe that he would be willing
to take over the agreement. The occupant of
No. 14, Edmund Antrobus, was raising difficulties about the termination of his tenancy, and
Strickland, who throughout his dealings with the
Commissioners adopted an excessively deferential and self-effacing tone, later admitted that he
would 'gladly have surrendered to one having a
large stake in this property, and being more influential than myself, the task of arranging the
difficulties that had arisen with reference to Mr
Antrobus'. Grissell, however, eventually declined
to take over Strickland's agreement ('I am inclined to think I had better not build more'),
but he recommended it to his friend George
Moore, the lace manufacturer and philanthropist,
who in July 1854 agreed to undertake it provided
he should be allowed to build only one house at a
cost of about £10,000. (ref. 135)
The Commissioners had not been told of these
changes when, on 31 July, they received from
Moore's architect, James Thomas Knowles
senior, the plans and elevations for a large detached house. Pennethorne nevertheless recommended them: 'considering . . . the proximity of
this plot in particular to the Palace', he wrote,
'it appears to me that the substitution of a large
House for two smaller will be advantageous to
the interests of the Crown'. On 8 August the
Commissioners approved the plans, but asked to
see more detailed drawings, which Knowles submitted in September. (ref. 135)
The house was built by Lucas Brothers and
Stevens of Lambeth, who began work in December 1854. (ref. 136) In June 1855 the house was recorded for the first time in the parish ratebooks
but it was not occupied by Moore and his family
until the following year. (ref. 111) The ground lease was
granted to Moore at Strickland's request in
November 1855. (ref. 137)
George Moore was a typical example of the
Victorian self-made man. From an unpromising
beginning as a £30-a-year assistant in a draper's
in Soho Square he had risen to become the most
important lace manufacturer in the country. His
biographer was none other than Samuel Smiles,
to whom Moore confided his uneasiness at having
spent so much on a house: 'Although I had built
the house at the solicitation of Mrs. Moore', he
said, 'I was mortified at my extravagance, and
thought it both wicked and aggrandizing—mere
ostentation and vain show—to build such a
house.' (ref. 138)
No significant alterations were made to No. 15
until 1937–8, when parts of the interior were
completely remodelled by Lord Gerald Wellesley
and Trenwith Wills for Sir Alfred Beit, the
financier and philanthropist. (ref. 139) The house is now
(1972) occupied by the Iraqi Ambassador.
No. 15 is one of the most architecturally
distinguished houses in Kensington Palace Gardens. It consists of three storeys over a basement,
although prior to the insertion of the windows in
the frieze, the third storey received light only from
the roof and from windows in the central recess
at the back. The symmetrical west façade is a
noble and palatial Italianate astylar composition
in the manner of Sir Charles Barry, seven windows wide, with small single-storey wings to the
north and south (Plate 106a).<Essentially the house is an enlarged version of Friday Grove, Clapham Park, designed by J. T. Knowles senior for himself and built in 1845-6, which in turn may have been based on Robert Richardson Banks's designs for No. 12 Kensington Palace Gardens, also of 1845-6 (see Priscilla Metcalf, James Knowles: Victorian Editor and Architect, 1980, pp.34-8 and Plate 3).> The entrance is in
the centre, flanked by Roman Doric engaged
columns supporting an entablature, and the
ground-floor windows have architraves surmounted by bracketed cornices carried on consoles. The ground storey has vermiculated
rustication, and is crowned by a large bracketed
cornice. The first-floor windows are aediculated,
with engaged Corinthian columns supporting
entablatures and pediments. The second-floor
windows, dating from 1937–8, interrupt the
frieze below the rich Roman Corinthian main
cornice, and tend to alter the balance of the
façade. The southern elevation of the singlestores south wing has an arcade carried on
Corinthian columns, and both wings are surmounted by balustrades.
The rear elevation (Plate 106b) is reminiscent
of Thomas Allom's contemporary work on the
Ladbroke estate. The ground storey, emphasized
by vermiculated rustication, has two large bows
flanking the centre, and above the windows are
Grecian friezes. On the second floor the two
terminal façades, each having a pair of aediculated
windows, were originally separated by the deep
recession of the centre to form a light-well, with
two Italianate staircase towers at the inner corners.
In 1937–8 this light-well was masked by a screen
linking the terminal façades. It consists of two
Corinthian columns set in antis and carrying a
simplified version of the original entablature. This
is surmounted by two draped classical female
figures, and the niches in the antae are occupied
by large urns.
The plan of the house is symmetrical, the
rooms being grouped round a spacious entrance
hall, the original fabric of which has survived
(fig. 37). This hall has a heavy coffered ceiling,
and the entablature, with modillioned cornice, is
carried on marbled Ionic columns with gilded
capitals (Plate 107a). A stone stair with cast-iron
balustrade of Grecian design rises to a first-floor
landing of the same area as the hall, and where
the architectural treatment is similar. There are
low-relief Grecian friezes in the hall and staircase,
and on the cream-coloured walls are grisaille
drapes painted in 1937–8. To the north of the
hall are the library and dining-room, both also
redecorated in 1937–8. The former is treated as
a pastiche of Bavarian Rococo originally designed
round J. de Lajoue's painting of an alchemist,
but now somewhat unconvincing without the
picture (Plate 106c). The colour-scheme is rosemadder, grey, white, and verde antico marbling,
with discreet gilding. The parquet floor is inlaid
with a star pattern, which echoed that in the
painting.
The dining-room is elliptical in shape, but was
originally rectangular, with a bow window. It
has an order of Corinthian pilasters supporting an
entablature with swagged frieze and modillioned
cornice. Six rectangular frames in exuberant
early eighteenth-century style are set in the panels
between the pilasters, and originally contained
the six paintings by Murillo depicting the Parable
of the Prodigal Son. The colour scheme was
turquoise with silver enrichments. The ceiling
contains a panoply of arms and armour, designed
by Rex Whistler, <with assistance from Victor Bowen>, which concealed the spotlights
illuminating the pictures.
South of the hall, and extending the full depth
of the house from west to east, is the music-room
(Plate 106d), attached to which is the singlestorey loggia, formerly a winter-garden. The
music-room is spacious and elegant, with fleur de
péche marbled Corinthian columns at either end
and a modillioned cornice. At the rear of the house
is the drawing-room, once a smaller morningroom, but redecorated in mid eighteenth-century
style with Ionic marbled columns, modillioned
cornice, plaster plaques and swags.

Figure 37:
No. 15 Kensington Palace Gardens before the alterations of 1937–8, front elevation and plans
No. 15B, the former stable block of No. 15,
was designed by Knowles and built by Lucas
Brothers in 1855. It was converted into a house in
1937–8 by J. Fooks and T. Ritchie, architects. (ref. 140)
No. 15A Kensington Palace Gardens
Plate 107b
The site of this house, like that of No. 15, was
made available for building only in March 1852
(see page 160). The Commissioners had, however,
already received an offer for it in January from
Peter Carthew of Kensington, a 'fundholder',
which Pennethorne in April advised them to
accept. Terms were agreed and Carthew undertook to spend at least £3,000 in building a firstrate house here, to be completed by 5 April 1854. (ref. 141)
The architect was David Brandon (whose
partnership with T. H. Wyatt had been dissolved
in 1851), and the contractor was John Kelk of
South Street, Grosvenor Square, an important and
successful builder who subsequently erected the
Albert Memorial. Brandon's plans and elevations
were approved by the Commissioners in June
1852 and building began in July. (ref. 142) By May 1853
the carcase was almost complete but the house
was evidently not finished for another two to
three years. It was first occupied by Carthew in
1856. The cost was said to have been about
£7,000. (ref. 143)
The lease of the site, at an annual rent of
£73 2s. 6d., was granted to Carthew in July 1855
and at the same time he entered into two agreements with the Commissioners to take a yearly
tenancy of all the remaining land to the south on
the west side of the road, previously let to a
butcher for grazing sheep and cattle. By one of
these agreements a strip of land thirty feet in
width immediately adjoining the site of the house
was to be laid out as an ornamental garden. (ref. 144)
This piece has now been incorporated into the
site of No. 15A. The rest of the area was to be
occupied only as a paddock, and a number of rights
of way across it were reserved to the Crown. This
area was surrendered for building in 1902 (see
page 189).
The house is now (1972) occupied by the
Nigerian High Commissioner.
It is built of white bricks with stucco dressings
and consists of three storeys over a basement, and
an attic. From a contemporary description in the
Commissioners' files it appears, however, that
there were originally no rooms in the roof. The
detail is conventional, save for the rusticated surrounds to the ground-floor windows and the
plaque set on the single-storey wing. The two
tiers of attic storeys on the north side were added
in 1934. The interior has been much altered. In
the main drawing-room are painted medallions
representing classical allegories, set beneath the
cornice.
No. 16 Kensington Palace Gardens
Plate 99b
This house was designed by T. H. Wyatt and D.
Brandon for John Sperling of Norbury Park,
Leatherhead, a retired army officer and landed
proprietor', who purchased the site from Blashfield
in 1846. The architects' plans and elevations were
approved by the Commissioners in May 1846
and building began soon afterwards. (ref. 145) In May
1847 Pennethorne reported that the house was
inhabited, although in the parish ratebooks it is
recorded as empty until June 1849. (ref. 146) When
Sperling applied for the lease, in April 1847, he
asked for the site to be extended to include part of
the adjoining plot to the south. (fn. j) The Commissioners agreed, and in April 1850 a lease of the
enlarged site was granted to him at an annual rent
of £105. (ref. 147)
Sperling occupied No. 16 until his death in
1877, when the ground lease was purchased by
Stuart Rendel, later Baron Rendel of Hatchlands,
an armaments manufacturer. In 1877 Rendel
engaged Charles Barry, junior, to prepare designs for an extensive remodelling of the house:
plans were approved and tenders submitted, but
the work was not executed. <Alterations, including a new music room, were carried out for Stuart Rendel in the late 1870s and early '80s by Halsey Ricardo, to whom he was related by marriage.> In 1903 the house was
altered both internally and externally by P.
Morley Horder, who designed the unusual
columnar entrance porch and other embellishments. (ref. 148)
The house is now (1972) occupied by the
Soviet Diplomatic Mission.
It consists of three storeys over a basement,
and is three windows wide. The east façade is
symmetrical, and the style is Italianate, with
undistinguished stucco ornament.
No. 17 Kensington Palace Gardens
Plate 93a, 93b; fig. 38
This house has been so much altered since it was
built by Blashfield in 1844–6 that the original
design in the north Italian villa manner is now
hardly discernible (Plate 93a). The architect was
Henry E. Kendall, junior, whose plans and elevations were approved by the Commissioners in
May 1844. (ref. 35) The lease of the site, at an annual
rent of £82, was granted to Blashfield in October
1844, and in May 1846, when the house was
finished, he sold the lease to John Balls of Oxford
Street, an upholsterer. (ref. 149)
(fn. k) The first occupant, in
1847, was David Laing Burn. (ref. 111)

Figure 38:
No. 17 Kensington Palace
Gardens, ground-floor plan in 1846
The present front (Plate 93b) is the result of
alterations and additions carried out at three
different dates. The raised pediment between the
two original 'wings' and the third-storey windows
below the crowning cornice were inserted in
1884, when the house was altered for S. P.
Kennard by J. Kinninmont and Sons, builders
and decorators. The three-bay extension on the
south side, designed by Charles E. Sayer, was
erected in 1899–1900 for the banker Isaac
Seligman, who had bought the lease in 1899. At
the same time the original balconies were removed
from the first-floor windows. The three-bay
extension over a garage on the north side was
built for (Sir) Charles Seligman in 1928 from
plans prepared by Messrs. Joseph, who also
designed the new entrance porch. The interior
has also been almost completely remodelled. (ref. 150)
This house is still privately occupied.
No. 18 and 19 Kensington Palace Gardens
Plate 98; fig. 39
The building of this pair of houses was begun in
1845 by Thomas Grissell and his partner (Sir)
Samuel Morton Peto and completed, after the
dissolution of their partnership in March 1846,
by Grissell alone (see page 158). The designs
were submitted to the Commissioners for approval
in August 1845 and received an enthusiastic
welcome from Pennethorne. 'The Plans and
Elevations are in my opinion greatly to be admired', he wrote, 'and the villas if built according
thereto will be an Ornament to the place.' (ref. 37) The
Commissioners' files contain no reference to the
name of the architect but there can be no doubt
that the houses were designed in (Sir) Charles
Barry's office (see page 158). The style of the
building is in the Italian palazzo manner so
favoured by Barry, and is very close to some of
the preliminary designs for Bridgwater House,
on which he had been working since 1841.
Building began in about September 1845, and
by May 1846 Pennethorne was able to report that
the carcase of the building was complete except
for the slating of the roof, 'which it is not prudent
to do for another month until the Towers are
built'. In constructing the thick stone-faced walls
of the houses the builders used some of the 'small
surplus stone' from the new Palace of Westminster. (ref. 37) Early in April 1847 both houses were
reported built and later in the month the leases
were granted to Grissell at an annual rent of
£78 (No. 18) and £78 6s. 8d. (No. 19). Each
lease included stables in the adjoining mews. (ref. 151)
Both houses are first recorded as occupied in
1851: No. 19 by Grissell himself, his wife and
nine servants, and No. 18 by John Leech, a
'general merchant', his family of seven, and eight
servants. (ref. 158)

Figure 39:
Nos. 18 and 19 Kensington Palace Gardens, ground-floor plan in 1847
Both houses have been altered and enlarged,
No. 18 rather more extensively than No. 19. In
1870 a two-bay, two-storey extension including
a picture-gallery and billiard-room was built at
the back of No. 18 for (Baron) Julius (de) Renter,
founder and director of the international news
agency, who occupied the house from 1868 until
his death in 1899. At the same time (1870) a
third tower was erected at the south-west corner,
and along the south side a one-storey conservatory
and entrance porch were built. The architects for
these alterations, designed in a matching style,
were F. and H. Francis. In 1904 the middle section of the conservatory was removed and laid out
as a terrace. (ref. 153)
At No. 19 a one-storey study was built for
Grissell at the back in 1857 from the designs of
R. R. Banks and Charles Barry, junior, and in
1884 a new porch and a single-storey extension
at the north-west corner were erected for
Gustav C. Schwabe, a banker, from the designs
of F. W. Porter. (ref. 154)
Nos. 18 and 19 are unusual in being a semidetached pair in which the two houses are of
different sizes and internal arrangements. The
asymmetrical plan (fig. 39) is, however, concealed
by a formal stone-faced façade to Kensington
Palace Gardens of Palladian design with a central
block flanked by two taller towers. The slightly
recessed central block is five windows wide and
two storeys high over a basement, and the two
flanking towers are each three storeys high, over
basements (Plate 98).
Window openings are aediculated: those on the
first floor with a Roman Doric order, and those
on the second floor with Ionic pilasters supporting
segmental pediments. The main cornice is carried
on large moulded console brackets, the whole
surmounted by a partly balustraded parapet. The
towers have quoins and the top stages are
decorated with festoons. The elevational treatment is continued on the stone-faced sides, but
the back of the houses, in brick, is plain.
Inside there is little left of the original design
save for the vaulted entrance halls, and the ceilings
in the main reception rooms of No. 19. The
dining-room ceiling here has a richly modillioned
cornice, guilloche moulding, and a central rose,
and there are finely enriched and gilded ceilings
in the drawing-room and ante-room.
No. 18 is now (1972) occupied by the Soviet
Diplomatic Mission, and No. 19 by the Egyptian
Consulate.
No. 20 Kensington Palace Gardens
Plates 96, 97a; fig. 40
This house, like Nos. 12, 18 and 19, was built
by Thomas Grissell with (prior to March 1846)
his partner (Sir) Samuel Morton Peto (see page
158). The plans and elevations for No. 20 and
No. 12 were submitted together to Pennethorne
on 13 February 1845 with a request from the
builders that they should not be strictly binding.
Two days later Pennethorne reported that both
sets of designs were 'unexceptionable' and on 19
February the Commissioners gave their consent. (ref. 37)
In Pennethorne's report both sets of designs were
said 'to emanate from Mr. Barry' (see page 158).
Although No. 20 was reported to be 'nearly
ready for habitation' at the end of May 1846 it
appears to have remained unoccupied until 1852,
when Louis Blumberg took the house as Grissell's
tenant. (ref. 155) The ground lease of the site, which
included a stable in the adjoining mews, had been
granted to Grissell in April 1847, at an annual rent
of £78 6s. 8d. (ref. 156)
As first built the unusual design of the house,
shown in a drawing of 1857 (Plate 96a), was
even more reminiscent of the work of Vanbrugh
or Hawksmoor than it is today—an effect largely
due to the giant order of Roman Doric pilasters
standing on pedestals, and to the bold grouping of
the chimneys at the corners. The orderly façade
was crowned by a large Roman Doric entablature,
above which was a balustrade concealing the
dormer windows in the roof. The dies of the
balustrade were capped by urns, and the corner
chimney-stacks decorated with blind arches. The
window-openings on the first and second storeys
had shouldered and segmental heads with keystones. Between the pilasters the walls were
channelled and grooved to resemble ashlar.
In 1857–8 substantial alterations were made by
Grissell from the designs of R. R. Banks and
Charles Barry, junior (Plate 96b). The roof was
raised five feet to provide a full attic storey, the
corner chimneys were heightened to correspond,
and the triglyphs between the capitals of the
pilasters removed. At the back the ground-floor
library was extended by the addition of a large
four-sided bay. In 1884 a porch was added, and
at the back a single-storey billiard-room, both to
designs by Robert Sawyer. The present porch,
inappropriately decorated with Ionic pilasters,
was erected for J. E. Taylor in 1888 and designed
by Ernest George and Peto, who also remodelled
the principal staircase. In 1890 George and Peto
designed the single-storey extension on the north
side for Taylor. (ref. 157) The façade is now plain
rendered and lacks the former keystones over the
windows (Plate 97a).

Figure 40:
No. 20 Kensington Palace Gardens,
original plans
The plan creates an effect of symmetry, the
main rooms being disposed on either side of the
long entrance hall, which is divided into three
domed bays (fig. 40). The rooms on the upper
floors have been rearranged, and a new staircase
has been built out to the rear. On the ground floor,
however, many of the original mouldings, cornices
and pilasters survive.
The house is now (1972) occupied by the
Commission for European Communities.
Nos. 21, 22 and 23 Kensington Palace Gardens
Plates 99a, c, 104a, b
These three houses were all designed and erected
by Charles Frederick Oldfield, a builder. The
earliest (No. 21) occupies a site which Oldfield
had acquired from Blashfield in 1845; the other
two were built after Blashfield's bankruptcy on
plots surrendered by his assignees.
No. 21 In June 1845 Blashfield, on Oldfield's
behalf, submitted the plans and elevations of this
house to the Commissioners, and these were
approved in July subject to some modifications in
the treatment of the chimneys. By December the
carcase had been completed, and in April 1846 the
house was reported to have been 'nearly finished'.
The ground lease, at an annual rent of £90, was
granted to Oldfield in June 1846, and by then
the house was occupied by Anthony Wilkinson,
a 'landed proprietor'. (ref. 158) It is now (1972) occupied
by the Lebanese Embassy.
This conventional stucco-faced house in the
Italianate manner consists of three storeys over a
basement, and is five windows wide (Plate 99a).
A projecting porch of the Roman Doric order is
carried on four columns and is centrally placed in
the symmetrical east elevation. The façade is
rusticated up to the subsidiary cornice at first-floor
level. The first-floor window architraves are
surmounted by pediments, and the second-floor
windows have plain architraves. The house has
quions and is capped by a modillioned and dentilled cornice over which is a balustrade.
The interior has been considerably altered. The
entrance hall and staircase were remodelled in
1905 by William Flockhart, and are decorated in
an early eighteenth-century manner, with richly
moulded and garlanded plasterwork. The saloon
(Plate 99c) is lined with panels of Rococo design
containing cartouches within which are landscapes in low relief. The ceiling is coved and
moulded, with delicate Rococo enrichments. The
panelled dining-room is in the Jacobean style, and
has a plaster ceiling with strapwork mouldings. (ref. 159)
No. 22 Unlike Nos. 21 and 23, this house
was not built as a speculation. It was designed and
erected by Oldfield for William Frederick
Gostling of Stowell House, Richmond, who in
February 1851 had offered the Commissioners a
rental of £75 a year for the site. His offer was
accepted and an agreement concluded by which
Gostling undertook to bulid and finish the house
by 5 July 1853. The plans and elevations were
submitted in December 1851 and approved by
Pennethorne, who nevertheless suggested that
Gostling might like to reconsider some of the
details of the upper-floor window-dressings. (ref. 160)
Building was reported in progress in December
1851, and by April 1854 Gostling was living in
the house. The ground lease was granted to him
in April 1853. The principal subsequent alteration
to No. 22 has been the building of a two-storey
extension, including a ballroom, on the north side
in 1883–4. This was designed by Francis Hooper
for Alfred Hickman. (ref. 161) The house is still privately
occupied.
Excluding the extensions the house consists of
three storeys over a basement, stuccoed in the
Italianate manner, and is five windows wide, the
portion containing the centre three windows
standing forward (Plate 104a). The house is
crowned by a heavy blocked Cornice, but there is
no balustrade.
No. 23 In April 1852 Pennethorne advised
the Commissioners to accept Oldfield's offer of
£75 a year for this site, and an agreement was
concluded by which Oldfield undertook to finish
building a house by 5 April 1854. Oldfield's plans
and elevations were approved in May 1852, and in
July his clerk of works applied for permission to
lay the drains. (ref. 162) Building began in September. (ref. 163)
By December 1853 the house was sufficiently
'advanced towards completion' for Oldfield to be
entitled to the lease, which was granted to him in
January 1854, and although the house was
probably completed soon afterwards it remained
empty until 1856. The first occupant was Isaac
Moses, a merchant, who bought the lease from
Oldfield towards the end of 1855. (ref. 164)
Before moving into the house Moses engaged
J. D. Hopkins to design two one-storey wings,
neither of which appear to have been built, the
present one-storey wing on the north side being
added in 1970–1. In 1856 the same architect designed for Moses the two-bay three-storey extension at the south-west corner and the bow-fronted
ballroom at the back. The elegant conservatory
on the south side was erected in 1877–8 to the
design of Edward Salomons, who was also the
architect of a new billiard-room which was built
at the north-west corner in the same year. (ref. 165)
This house is now (1972) occupied by the
Japanese Embassy.
It consists of three storeys and a basement
(Plate 104b). The stuccoed east façade is seven
windows wide with the central portion slightly
recessed, forming outer pavilions each two
windows in width. The coursed ground storey
is finished with a plain cornice, and a canopied
porch projects from the centre of the façade. The
first-floor windows have moulded architraves,
the three in the centre having segmental pediments, and the flanking pairs having plain cornices.
There are panels of balusters beneath the sills.
An enriched stringcourse extends across the front
below the second-floor windows, which have
crossetted architraves. The façade is finished with
a bracketed cornice crowned by a balustrade.
The entrance hall occupies the full depth of the
house, and contains a stone stair, with cast-iron
balusters, at the rear. The decorations of the hall
are plain, the only enrichments being provided by
the egg-and-dart moulding of the cornice, and the
brackets supporting a beam.
The long dining-room, to the north of the hall,
is partly within the original house, and partly in
the one-storey wing. It has a fine concave cornice
enriched with acanthus leaves. The drawingroom, to the south of the entrance hall, has a
modillioned cornice, but is otherwise unremarkable. West of the drawing-room, and approached
from it through double doors, is the ballroom, with
a large bow projecting into the rear garden. This
room is decorated with pilasters, based on Florentine Renaissance originals, supporting a large
coved cornice enriched with trellis-work, which
has also been copied in the ceiling rose. There is
a carved marble fireplace.
The study, a small room adjoining the ballroom, with access from the hall, has plaster walls
moulded to resemble linenfold panelling of the
Tudor period.
Apart from the cornices above the stairs, and
in the hall, dining-room and drawing-room, the
internal decorations are not original.
No. 24 Kensington Palace Gardens
Plate 97b; fig. 41
When Blashfield submitted the plans and elevations of this house for approval in August 1845
Pennethorne reported to the Commissioners that
'as the House will be large, handsome & well
disposed, I see no reason for objecting to either
the plans or Elevation—although the latter is in
the Moresque Style, which (though not usually
adopted), is admired by some persons & produces
a picturesque effect'. (ref. 166) Unfortunately these drawings have not survived, (fn. l) and in the absence of any
contemporary picture it is not possible to say how
far the present elevation (Plate 97b) represents the
intentions of the architect, Owen Jones. (ref. 44) The
Indian-style domes on the parapet appear to be
original, but other 'small cement ornaments' on
the parapet and chimney-stacks were removed in
1879. (ref. 166)
The Commissioners approved the designs in
September 1845, and by December work was
sufficiently advanced on the carcase of the house
for Blashfield to apply for the lease. (ref. 167) This was
granted to him on 23 December and on the
following day he mortgaged it for an unknown
sum to Lewis Vulliamy, the architect, whose
pupil Jones had been. (ref. 168)
The house had not, however, been completed
when Blashfield became bankrupt in May 1847,
although the work was reported well advanced,
with the exterior 'finished down to the cornice
above the ground floor windows'. At first
Blashfield's assignees proposed to finish the house
themselves, and they obtained from the Commissioners an extension of the time allowed in
which to do so. In July, however they decided
they did not have the necessary authority to carry
out the work, and in August the unfinished house
was sold at the auction of Blashfield's estate for
£3,400, although Blashfield had spent over
£9,000 on the building. The purchaser was
James Ponsford, a builder who worked extensively
in Bayswater and St. John's Wood as well as on
Thomas Cubitt's developments in Belgravia.
Ponsford completed the house and lived there with
his family from 1850 to 1859. In 1851 his household consisted of twelve people of whom five
were servants. (ref. 169)

Figure 41:
No. 24 Kensington Palace Gardens, ground-floor
plan in 1845
No doubt Ponsford completed the exterior of
the building in accordance with the approved
designs, but there is no evidence that the original
interior decorations were by Jones (as they had
been in his other house for Blashfield, No. 8).
Several additions have been made at the back of
the house, the most important being the picture
gallery designed by Herbert Cescinsky for Chester
Beatty in 1937. Cescinsky had previously converted the adjoining stables in Palace Gardens
Mews into a library for Beatty. (ref. 170)
The house is now (1972) occupied by the
Saudi Arabian Ambassador.
It consists of three storeys over a basement,
and is completely faced with stucco. The east
façade is symmetrical, seven windows wide, with
a central projecting porch, and a balcony extending across the full width of the elevation on lotuspatterned supports (Plate 97b). There is a
crowning cornice and parapet, the latter, like the
balcony, being pierced with geometrical
'Moresque' decoration. The onion-shaped domes
on the parapet give the house a somewhat exotic
appearance, but the eclectic exterior includes
some recognizably contemporary features, and
generally the style of the house owes as much to
English and Italian precendents as to either Moorish or Indian prototypes. The decorative motifs
are used on a basically classical façade, replacing
conventional balusters, consoles, urns and statuary.
On the ground floor the principal rooms have
been remodelled. They include a study with
panelling in the Jacobean style, and a plaster
ceiling and frieze reminiscent of the work of
Ernest Gimson, a first drawing-room in the
Rococo style of the mid eighteenth century, and
a second drawing-room in the Baroque manner.
This has a deep, heavily modelled, cornice of
large acanthus leaves with emblems of geography,
literature, military might and music. Above the
fireplace: and over the window opposite are
allegorical cartouches of summer and winter.
Nos. 25 and 26 Kensington Palace Gardens
Plates 92a, 93c. Demolished
In March 1844 Blashfield had proposed to erect
only one house here and he submitted a design
by T. H. Wyatt and D. Brandon which the
Commissioners approved. By the end of the year,
however, two similar, though not identical,
Italianate villas with 'campanile towers' had been
built on the site from the designs of the same
architects. (ref. 171) The ground leases, each at an annual
rent of £65, were granted to Blashfield in October
(No. 26) and December (No. 25) 1844. (ref. 172) By
June of the following year No. 26 was occupied
by Blashfield's tenant Cristobal de Murrietta, a
Spanish-born merchant and banker. (ref. 173)
No. 25, the larger of the two, on which
Blashfield spent over £10,000, was still unoccupied
when he became bankrupt. In August 1847 the
house was put up for auction by his assignees, but
was withdrawn at £6,700. Eventually it came
into the hands of Frederick Dawson of The
Temple, to whom Blashfield had mortgaged the
house for £7,500, and in 1852 he leased it to
Benjamin B. Greene, a 'landowner and merchant',
who was the first occupant. (ref. 174)
No. 25 was demolished in 1947 on account of
extensive dry rot, and No. 26 was demolished to
make way for the new Czech Embass. (ref. 175) This
building, erected in 1968–9, was designed by J.
Sramek, J. Bocan and K. Stepansky of Prague in
association with Robert Matthew, Johnson-Marshall and Partners. It occupies all of the site
of No. 26 and part of the site of No. 25, and has a
long frontage to Notting Hill Gate which extends
as far as Palace Gardens Terrace and thus blocks
off the old entrance to Palace Gardens Mews. (ref. 176)
(fn. m)
A new entrance to the mews has now been laid
out across part of the site of No. 25.
No. 1 Palace Green
Plates 108, 109; fig. 42
In March 1867 George James Howard, the
twenty-three-year-old nephew of the eighth
Earl of Carlisle, purchased the lease of the old
grace-and-favour residence at No. 1 Palace Green
for £1,600. (ref. 178) This lease, which was for eighty
years from 1863, contained a provision that the
old house had to be demolished and a new one
built at a cost of at least £3,500. Howard, whose
'real devotion was to art', had commissioned
Philip Webb to design him a house with a studio,
and before buying the lease he had taken the precaution of finding out that a red-brick house by
Webb would not be objected to in principle by the
Commissioners. (ref. 179)
Pennethorne, however, refused to approve
Webb's drawings when they were submitted in
August 1867. He wrote to Charles Gore, the
First Commissioner, that if the house was built
according to them it would be 'far inferior to any
one on the Estate—it would look most commonplace—and in my opinion be perfectly hideous'.
He made his main objections clear later when he
wrote, 'So far as I understand the drawings there
would be scarcely any stone visible in the fronts
of the house, the whole of the surfaces would be
masses of red brickwork without relief from stone
or from any important strings or cornices'. (ref. 180) He
also objected to the steep pitch of the roof and the
gable on the east elevation. Webb's original
design has not, as far as is known, survived, but
Pennethorne's comments and later ones by Webb
himself imply that a modicum of stonework may
have been intended for the east front, but that on
the extensive north and south façades the dressings
were to be entirely of brick.
Webb at first refused to compromise and
Howard's father, Charles Howard, who was
Member of Parliament for East Cumberland,
began to put pressure on the Commissioners,
beginning a letter, 'George is much annoyed as
well he may be'. Gore replied that 'you must not
think me unkind if I do not altogether disregard
the interests of the Crown while desirous as far
as possible to comply with George's wishes'. (ref. 180)
Gore disliked the design almost as much as
Pennethorne but was prepared to give way.
Pennethorne, however, was adamant in his
refusal to give his approval, and letters between
himself and Webb reveal the irreconcilable
differences between an architect in his sixties
brought up in the tradition of Nash and a young
man in his thirties who wished to reject what
he considered to be the artificialities of the stucco
age and return to a vernacular tradition of building in brick. To Pennethorne's criticisms Webb
replied that. 'I must decidedly disagree with you,
that the proper proportioned window openings
which I have used, fitted with well divided sashes,
is an "unattractive" form . . . I must also beg to
differ from your opinion that the materials used
would not give the proper relief; a well chosen
full coloured red brick, with pure bright red
gauged brick mouldings, arches, string courses,
cornices &c with the addition of white Portland
stone, white sashframes, lead, and grey slates, are
in my opinion the very best and most harmoniously
coloured materials to be used in London, & more
especially in a neighbourhood so happily full of
green foliage . . . In conclusion, I must express
my great surprise that you should consider it
worth your while to hinder the erection of a
building, which—whatever may be its demerits
possesses some character and originality, tempered
most certainly with reverential attention to the
works of acknowledged masters of the art of
architecture, and as certainly framed with the
wish to avoid adding another insult to this irreparably injured neighbourhood.' (ref. 180)
(fn. n)
Anthony Salvin and Thomas Henry Wyatt
were called in as referees and endorsed Pennethorne's judgment. Webb commented significantly about one of their criticisms, 'That
Messrs. Salvin and Wyatt are "unable to discover
what actual style or period of architecture" I have
used, I take to be a sincere compliment', for he
was attempting to achieve a form of architectural
expression which would not be restricted by conformity to one or other of the historic styles. He
agreed finally to modify the design, however, and
submitted new elevations in February 1868. In a
letter to Howard he explained the main variations
from his original design. These consisted principally of the addition of some stonework in the
form of a plinth, a broad band of stone at firstfloor level with a moulded stringcourse, the substitution of stone for brick and tile sills to most of
the windows, and the finishing of the chimney
caps in stone. Other alterations included raising
and broadening the porch with the addition of 'a
considerable amount of carved decoration', redesigning the studio window, which was to be
set in 'a more ornamental gable of diapered brick
and stone', and the addition of 'a considerable
amount of ornamentation' to the drawing-room
window on the north elevation. 'Under the
circumstances' Pennethorne was prepared to
approve the revised drawings, provided that a
stone cornice with a projection of at least eighteen
inches was substituted for the brick one. Webb
refused this point blank, as he considered the construction and proportion of the building to be
essentially Gothic and the introduction of a
classical cornice to be completely incongruous.
Once again there was deadlock and Howard
approached William Butterfield to supply another
design. Butterfield refused the commission,
partly because he considered that Webb had been
unfairly treated, but also, according to Howard,
because he did not wish to place his work under
the control of Pennethorne's taste. T. H. Wyatt
was consulted again and advised that a brick
cornice was acceptable. (ref. 181)

Figure 42:
No. 1 Palace Green, plans in 1883
At last the house could be built. It was completed in carcase by June 1869 (ref. 182) and Howard
was in residence by the following summer. (ref. 111)
With the addition in 1873 of a gable similar to
that on the east front to the south elevation (ref. 183)
now unfortunately largely obscured—the exterior
of the house received the form which survived
with little alteration until the 1950's (Plate
108a, c). The interior decoration was carried out
over several years, largely to the designs of Webb
and fellow artists in the William Morris circle.
The pièce de rèsistance was the ground-floor
morning-room of dining-room, for which BurneJones, assisted by Walter Crane, provided an
elaborate frieze painted on canvas panels illustrating the legend of Cupid and Psyche as retold in
one of Morris's poems in The Earthly Paradise (Plate 109). (ref. 184)
(fn. o)
Shortly after Howard, by then ninth Earl of
Carlisle, died in 1911, the lease was purchased by
John Barker and Company and for a while the
house was used as a furniture store. In 1922
Barker's proposed to demolish it and add its site
to that on the south, which they had taken under
a building agreement with the Commissioners.
A strong protest from a group of writers and
architects greeted this proposal, and the house
was saved. (ref. 185) In 1957 permission was granted for
its conversion into flats, and the resulting alterations have not only denuded the interior of its
original character, but have led to serious changes
to the exterior, particularly the addition of several
windows in the north elevation (Plate 108b). (ref. 186)
No. 2 Palace Green
Fig. 43
This house was built in 1860–2 for William
Makepeace Thackeray. It has often been said
that Thackeray was himself largely responsible
for its design, and that its erection marked a milestone in the history of architectural taste, but there
seems to be little evidence for either of these
contentions.
In March 1860 Thackeray offered to take the
old grace-and-favour house at No. 2 Palace
Green on a repairing lease. (ref. 187) Pennethorne had
suggested that the house should be demolished
and a new one built in its place, but the Commissioners, mindful of Queen Victoria's objection
to the erection of any new buildings opposite to
Kensington Palace, did not immediately act on
his suggestion. (ref. 188) After negotiation Thackeray's
offer was accepted, and on 8 March he wrote, 'I
have taken at last the house on Kensington
Palace Green in which I hope the history of
Queen Anne will be written'. (ref. 189)
Thackeray had agreed to spend £1,400 on
repairs, but when a careful survey was made of
the house its much-dilapidated condition was
revealed. In May 1860 Frederick Hering, a
sixty-year-old architect with an office in Argyll
Street, St. James's, submitted drawings and
specifications for a new house to be built of red
brick with cement dressings at a cost of at least
£4,000. (ref. 187) In view of the Commissioners' reluct
ance to sanction a new building on the site, it is
likely that discussions had taken place which are
not revealed in the correspondence. Pennethorne
reported that 'I see no objection to the Design
being approved on condition that all the Details
be copied from those of Marlborough House (fn. p)
all the rusticated piers—the Cornices &c . . . to
be executed . . . in Stone, or Portland Cement'. (ref. 187)
In the light of this report the Commissioners'
approval, which was sent to Thackeray on 29
June 1860, reads somewhat strangely, for it
required all the dressings to be of red brick; (ref. 120) in
the event both brick and stone or stucco dressings
were used. The builders were Jackson and
Graham, an Oxford Street firm which specialized
largely in interior decoration, and the house was
ready for occupation by March 1862. The total
cost, including fittings, was over £8,000. (ref. 191)

Figure 43:
No. 2 Palace Green, front elevation and plans in 1882
The assertion that the design was Thackeray's
own appears to have been first made by his biographers shortly after his death in 1863. (ref. 192) There
is no doubt that he took a close personal interest in
the house, and he may have been instrumental in
choosing red brick as the facing material, for he
undoubtedly endorsed the views of a contributor (fn. q)
to the April 1860 issue of The Cornhill Magazine, of which he was the editor, that the ideal
house was 'of red brick, not earlier than 1650,
not later than 1750'. (ref. 193) The choice of red brick,
however, also satisfied the Commissioners, who,
if they had to sanction a rebuilding at all, wanted
the new house to harmonize with Kensington
Palace. The relationship between architect and
client is not known, but that Hering was more
than merely a nominal architect is suggested by
the fact that he exhibited a drawing of the projected house under his own name at the Architectural Exhibition held in Conduit Street in 1861.
In May 1861 Thackeray wrote about the house,
then under construction, to an American friend,
calling it 'the reddest house in all the town' and
enclosing a sketch from 'fond memory'. This
sketch shows several variations from the finished
house including seven dormer windows instead of
five, the hint of stucco architraves to the windows
and the omission of the pilasters from the front
elevation. That the pilasters were not a late addition to the design is known from the fact that
they were shown in Hering's drawing, which was
exhibited before Thackeray wrote his letter. (ref. 194)
It seems hardly likely that Thackeray would have
forgotten about such crucial features in the appearance of the house if he had been so closely
involved in its design as has sometimes been stated.
The contention that the house marked a crucial
turning point in the history of house-styles may
have its origins in a remark by Sir John Millais,
who, according to Thackeray's daughter, 'used
to laugh, and declared that my father first set the
fashion for red brick'. (ref. 195) There is no indication,
however, that the house received any but the most
scant recognition in architectural circles at the
time it was built. When Hering exhibited his
drawing of the house, The Builder ignored it
completely and The Building News, which made
a point of commenting on every entry, described
it as 'of red brick, in the Italian style'. (ref. 194) In 1869
The Builder printed a short obituary of Hering
which did not mention No. 2 Palace Green and
described him as 'an accomplished and amiable
man, [who] seems to have obtained few opportunities to distinguish himself in his profession'. (ref. 196)
Several alterations have been made to the house,
particularly to the interior. In 1882 Spencer
Chadwick added another storey and a canted bay
to the single-storey wing on the north side, which
had contained Thackeray's library. These alterations necessitated the removal of a Venetian
window which faced the road. (ref. 197) By 1938 little
remained of the original interior decorations, and
in that year a further scheme of redecoration was
undertaken by Darcy Braddell. (ref. 198)
Nos. 4–10 (consec.) Palace Green
Plates 110, 111; fig. 44
After the completion of building on the northern
part of the land transferred to the Office of Woods
and Forests by the Act of 1841, the extensive
frontage on the west side of the road between
No. 15A Kensington Palace Gardens and the old
house at No. 3 Palace Green was left undeveloped
for nearly fifty years. Ostensibly, sufficient income
had been secured from the leases already granted
to cover the cost of laying out the kitchen gardens
at Frogmore, but the real reason why building
did not take place on this land during the nineteenth century was the wish of Queen Victoria
that no new buildings should be erected opposite
Kensington Palace. (ref. 199) The death of the Queen
in 1901, however, changed the situation, and
Edward VII was sounded for his views on letting
the ground on building leases. The initiative
seems to have come from the Office of Woods,
and the King, who was anxious to undertake
improvements to the gardens at Windsor, at once
approved the idea. The Commissioners estimated
that a ground rent of at least £600 to £700 per
annum could be secured for the land (an underestimate in the event), and that, capitalized at
thirty years' purchase, this would provide between
£18,000 and £21,000 for the work at Windsor. (ref. 200)
Early in 1903 particulars of a scheme for letting
the land were made public. (ref. 199) The ground was
divided into seven plots which were to be let for
the erection of private houses similar to others in
Kensington Palace Gardens. The elevations were
to be of handsome architectural design, and executed in Portland stone, fine red brick or terra
cotta or other material, not inferior thereto, to be
approved by the Commissioners', and each house
was to consist of not more than three main
storeys besides a basement and an attic, with an
overall height restriction of forty-five feet.
Tenders were invited for the best ground rents
for eighty-year leases, and £1,380 was offered
by both William Willett (fn. r) of Chelsea and Holloway
Brothers of Lambeth, the latter, however, for
ninety-nine-year leases. A compromise was
probably reached between the two firms, for,
although Willett's tender was accepted, the
leasehold term was extended to ninety-nine years
and Willett made the three southernmost plots
available to Holloway Brothers, who built Nos.
4, 5 and 6. (ref. 202)
Although a number of different architects were
employed in their design, these houses are very
similar in appearance (Plate 110). This similarity
results partly from the use of red brick, and Portland stone throughout, but may also be partly due
to the control exercised by Willett and his architect, Amos Faulkner, on the one hand and the
Commissioners' architects—Arthur Green and,
after Green's death in 1904, John Murray—on
the other. In only one case—No. 8—is the
architect not known. He may have been Faulkner
himself, who is known to have co-operated on the
design of No. 7. (ref. 203) Other architects were Read
and MacDonald (Nos. 4 and 6), E. P. Warren
(No. 5), Horace Field and C. E. Simmons with
Faulkner (No. 7), Stevenson and Redfern (No. 9),
and E. J. May (No. 10). (ref. 204) The first drawings to
be submitted by Willett were for No. 9 in July
1903. They were, according to an accompanying
letter, by J. J. Stevenson (then in partnership with
Harry Redfern), but Green thought that they
were 'ill-conceived' and did not show a suitable
house. A new set of drawings was submitted and
received Green's approval, although he required
further details to be sent to him so that he could
keep his eye on the work when the house was
under construction. Both sets of drawings have
been preserved and the rejected designs show a
plainer house with less use of Portland stone. (ref. 205)
The Commissioners' architects continued to pay
very close attention to the drawings for the Various
houses and Willett was careful to try to anticipate
their wishes. Thus in 1904 Green wrote with
reference to May's design for No. 10, The
drawings . . . were laid before me on several
occasions before being completed and show in my
opinion a very good house suitable for the site'. (ref. 199)
The last house to be built was No. 7. Willett
first submitted drawings for this house in 1909,
but later withdrew them as he had not yet been
able to find a purchaser for No. 8—a costly house
built as a speculation—and did not want to embark on another. In 1910 he wrote, 'Having
regard to the depressed condition of the house
property market, I think we have not done badly
to have built six such fine houses as those which
have been erected'. Eventually he found a client
who wanted a house especially built for him, and
No. 7 was begun in 1912. In the following
year No. 8 was sold for the handsome price of
£27,750. (ref. 206)
Set in modest gardens separated from the road
by Portland stone walls, massive gate piers, and
iron railings, these houses are similar in style as well
as in materials and scale. They fall into two main
groups: Nos. 4–7 are symmetrical, with modillioned cornices and pediments, reminiscent of late
seventeenth-and early eighteenth-century Dutch
examples, while Nos. 8–10 are asymmetrical,
also with Dutch influences in the architecture,
especially in the gables of No. 9. The latter three
houses have two-storey entrance halls with
galleries at first-floor level, light being admitted
by large windows with stone mullions and transoms. These windows are notable features of the
east elevations of Nos. 8 and 9 and the west
elevation of No. 10. The entrance halls are
panelled, and the gallery balusters are turned and
carved.
Apart from these 'Jacobethan' entrance halls
(Plate 111b, c), the original interiors seem to have
been basically classical in character. That of No. 5
appears to be almost intact and as its builders left
it. The marble staircase with wrought-iron balustrades, symmetrically placed on the main axis of
the house, is based on late seventeenth-century
examples and is particularly impressive (Plate
111a). The decorations throughout are of plaster,
the main rooms having friezes and cornices in the
manner of Adam. Of the remaining houses, No.
7 has been completely modernized and others have
undergone modifications. Nos. 8, 9 and 10,
however, retain their original internal arrangements and character.

Figure 44:
No. 9 Palace Green, front elevation and plans in 1903
The planning was similar in each case, with
the kitchen, storage areas and some servants'
quarters in the basement, the main living-rooms
on the ground floor, and bedrooms on the upper
floors, those in the attic being for domestic staff.
Electric lifts appear to have been provided for all
of the houses.
A high standard of building and finish is evident, the construction being basically of loadbearing brickwork with fire-resistant floors
formed of five inches of concrete cast on corrugated iron permanent shuttering carried on
rolled-steel joists. The Commissioners had specified that the houses should be 'fire-resisting
throughout'.
The Barracks, Kensington Church Street
These barracks, erected in 1856–8, stand on the
site of the original kitchen garden of Kensington
Palace, which was laid out at the end of the
seventeenth century and which was later known
as the forcing ground. In the north-east corner of
this garden stood the brick conduit, illustrated by
Faulkner, which was said to have been built by
Henry VIII to supply water to his house at
Chelsea Place. At the time of its erection this
conduit was on the east side of a four-acre field
called 'the More' (and subsequently Conduit
Close), comprising the site of the forcing ground
and an area to the north, later the sites of Maitland
House and York House (see page 29). During
the seventeenth century Conduit Close was
divided, and by 1672 the forcing ground site had
passed into the hands of Sir Heneage Finch, later
first Earl of Nottingham, whose son sold it to
William III in 1689. (ref. 207)
In 1841 the Commissioners' architects, in
their plan for building over the kitchen gardens,
had proposed that a short road should be laid out
across the forcing ground between Kensington
Church Street and The Queen's Road. This plan
was approved and in June 1844 a contract for
laying a sewer was awarded. By July, however, the
Commissioners and the Board of Ordnance were
discussing the possibility of building a barracks
on the forcing ground to replace the old barracks
on Palace Green, which stood on the line of The
Queen's Road. An agreement to let part of the
site for a barracks was concluded, but in 1854 this
was set aside by mutual consent. (ref. 206)
Thereupon the Commissioners decided to let
the ground for building: a layout plan was
selected, which included a row of shops along the
Church Street front, a road was constructed across
the ground, and in November 1855 terms were
arranged to let the whole site to the builder John
Kelk. But this development did not take place,
for in December the War Department informed
the Commissioners that the forcing ground was,
after all, required in its entirety for a barracks
of large extent. (ref. 209)
Under an agreement of 1 July 1856 the site
was leased to the Secretary of State for War, who
contracted to have the barracks completed within
two years. (fn. s) They were to cost not less than
£14,000, and the eastern elevation was to be 'in
a plain but good style of architecture of such a
character as shall not in the opinion of the . . .
Commissioners . . . be unsightly or in any use
detrimental to the Houses on each side of the
Queen's Road'. (ref. 211) The architect was probably
Colonel Frederick Chapman, R.E., whose signature appears on the contract drawings; the builders
were Benjamin and John Dale of Warwick
Square. (ref. 212)
The barracks consist principally of two residential blocks, one of two storeys and the other
of three storeys, intended originally for the
cavalry and infantry respectively. The 'plain but
good' style of architecture adopted for the outward-facing façades of each block is a curious
mixture of late seventeenth-century English
motifs (including brick quoins) and mid-Victorian
Italianate.
To compensate the residents of The Queen's
Road for the loss of the road laid out in 1855,
which they had found useful as a short-cut into
Church Street, the War Department constructed
a footpath along the north side of the site. This
still survives. In 1906 part of the site of the
barracks was given up for the widening of
Kensington Church Street. (ref. 213) The building
ceased to be used as a barracks in 1972. <It was demolished in 1987.>
Nos. 26–40 (even) Kensington High Street
This building was designed in 1924 by Sir
Reginald Blomfield and H. L. Cabuche for John
Barker and Company. Blomfield was responsible
for the elevations and Cabuche for the internal
planning and construction. (ref. 214)
When the London County Council obtained
powers to widen Kensington High Street by
demolishing most of the existing properties on the
north side of the street to the east of Kensington
Church Street, the Commissioners of Woods and
Forests made it known that they wished to
purchase the land to the south of No. 1 Palace
Green which the Council planned to acquire.
In 1905, shortly after road widening had taken
place, this land was transferred to the Crown, and
in 1906 it was advertised as building ground. No
tenders were received, and despite re-advertisement several times reasonable offers were still not
forthcoming. Proposals to erect a cinema on the
site proved abortive, and for a while the ground
was used by the Church Army as a 'City Garden'.
In 1912 John Barker and Company took a
monthly tenancy of part of the site to erect
temporary buildings after one of their stores had
been damaged by fire. Finally in 1919 the same
company submitted an offer for a ninety-nine-year
building lease of the plot, which the Commissioners accepted with alacrity. The site made
available by the Commissioners under a building
agreement concluded in 1921 included some land
at the rear of No. I Palace Green which they had
purchased in 1920. John Murray, the architect
to the Office of Woods, insisted on certain amendments to the plans of the proposed building to
safeguard the amenities of No. I Palace Green. (ref. 215)