Portland Place
Number 1, Portland Place | |
Maintained by | Transport for London |
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Location | London, United Kingdom |
Postal code | W1 |
Nearest tube station | |
Other | |
Known for |
Portland Place is a street in the Marylebone district of central London.
History and topography
The street was laid out by the brothers Robert and James Adam for the Duke of Portland in the late 18th century and originally ran north from the gardens of a detached mansion called Foley House. It was said that the width of the street was conditioned by the Duke's obligation to his tenant, Lord Foley, that his views to the north would not be interfered with.[1]
In the early 19th century Portland Place was incorporated into the royal route from Carlton House to Regent's Park via Langham Place, developed for the Prince Regent by John Nash. The street is unusually wide for central London (33 metres / 110 feet).[2] The ambitious plans included a third circus to complement Piccadilly Circus and Oxford Circus known as Regent's Circus; the remains of this plan survive today in the wide space surrounding the street's junction with Marylebone Road.[3]
Portland Place still contains many of the spacious Georgian terraced houses built by the Adams, as well as some early 20th century buildings and a few post World War II bombing
In administrative terms, Portland Place lies within the City of Westminster's Marylebone High Street Ward as well as the Harley Street Conservation Area.[4]
Residents and buildings
Many of the houses are now occupied by company headquarters, professional bodies, embassies and charities (including Arthritis Research UK and the Royal Air Force Benevolent Fund). The landmark building of the Royal Institute of British Architects sits directly opposite the Chinese embassy; for years practitioners of Falun Gong have mounted a silent protest in front of the former and facing the latter. Other foreign diplomatic institutions include the Polish Embassy, a Portuguese Consulate, the High Commission of Kenya, the Swedish Ambassador's Residence and the Colombian Consulate. In addition, Portland Place remains a fashionable address with some very exclusive blocks of mansion flats. Number 1 houses the Institution of Chemical Engineers, number 41 the Academy of Medical Sciences and number 76 the Institute of Physics. The Institute of Physics building replaced two earlier Georgian terrace houses, one of which – number 76 – was the home of John Buchan, the author and politician who lived there from 1912 until 1919, which resulted in Portland Place being the London home of Richard Hannay, the hero of Buchan's most famous novel "The Thirty-Nine Steps".[5]
Its northern end opens into Nash's elegant stucco semicircular Park Crescent, which in turn leads on to Park Square and Regent's Park. There are two landmark buildings at the south end of the street, although both are technically in Langham Place: the grand late Victorian Langham Hotel, and Broadcasting House. Langham Place is a short road which connects Portland Place to Upper Regent Street, although on the ground they all appear to be one street.
A Grade II listed memorial to Quintin and Alice Hogg erected in 1906 stands opposite Broadcasting House at the south end of Portland Place.[6]
There are a number of international independent schools on Portland Place, including Abercorn Upper School, Queens College and the Southbank International School.
Literary references
- Portland Place was the home of Jane Gamble, the character on whom Henry James based his novel The Portrait of a Lady.
- Jane Gamble was also the real-life subject of My Courtship and its Consequences by Henry Wikoff.
- Portland Place was the London address of Adam Verver and his wife, the former Charlotte Stant, in the last complete major novel by Henry James, The Golden Bowl.
- Portland Place is the home of Richard Hannay in John Buchan's novel The Thirty-nine Steps.
- Portland Place is the home of Stephen Jones in H. P. Lovecraft's short story "The Horror in the Museum".
- Portland Place is featured in Daphne Du Maurier's novel ‘'Julius'’.
- Portland Place is the location of the private hotel where Valeria and Eustace stay after their truncated honeymoon in The Law and the Lady by Wilkie Collins.
- Portland Place is a metaphor for Septimus Warren Smith's view of the world as a strange but wonderful place in Virginia Woolf's novel Mrs. Dalloway.[7]
See also
- List of eponymous roads in London
- August 1967 British Pathe Newsreel covering the "Battle on Portland Place" (which was then without trees)
References
- Georgian London (1945) by Sir John Summerson ISBN 0-7126-2095-8
- ↑ "Broadcasting House – before it was built". Miketodd.net. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
- ↑ Norrie, Ian; Bohm, Dorothy (1984). Walks Around London – A Celebration of the Capital. London: Andre Deutsch. ISBN 0-233-97979-4.
- ↑ Plan of a Street Proposed from Charing Cross to Portland Place (Map). Commissioners of Woods and Forests. 1811. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
- ↑ "Harley Street Conservation Area Map September 2007" (PDF). Westminster City Council. Retrieved 21 May 2010.
- ↑ "John Buchan the Presbyterian Cavalier", by Andrew Lownie
- ↑ "Statue of Quintin Hogg". English Heritage list. English Heritage. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
- ↑ Woolf, Virginia (1981). Mrs. Dalloway. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing. p. 83. ISBN 978-0-15-662870-9.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Portland Place. |
- Portland Place on Streetmap.co.uk Map
- Portland Place London
- History of the Langham London Hotel on Portland Place
- Portland Place Community Facebook Page
- Security For Chinese Legation Portland Place Newsreel 1967
- Portland Place and the BBC Video 2007
Coordinates: 51°31′13″N 0°08′42″W / 51.52023°N 0.14499°W