Stanley Gardens, W11

Road in/near Notting Hill, existing between 1855 and now

 HOME  ·  ABOUT  ·  ARTICLE  ·  MARKERS ON  ·  BLOG 
(51.51234 -0.2037, 51.512 -0.203) 
MAP YEAR:18001810182018301860190019502025 
 
Road · * · W11 ·
October
10
2021
Stanley Gardens was built in the 1850s.

Stanley Gardens was probably named after the noted politician Edward Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby, who became Prime Minister in 1852. There used also to be a Stanley Gardens Mews, which ran down the north side of St Peter’s church.

Stanley Gardens is perhaps the prime example of the Ladbroke Estate planners’ love affair with vistas. This short street looks west towards the two magnificent central houses in Stanley Crescent and to the east there is an equally magnificent view of St Peter’s church. As so often on the Ladbroke estate, the end-of-terrace houses on both sides are round the corner in Stanley Crescent and Kensington Park Road.

The original design for the Ladbroke estate, based on concentric circles, was made in the 1820s by Thomas Allason, the architect-surveyor employed by James Weller Ladbroke when he inherited the estate and decided to develop it. Allason’s design did not survive in its original form, but the layout of Stanley Gardens, Stanley Crescent and the three communal gardens behind them represents an adaptation of part of it by Thomas Allom, a landscape artist turn architect who came on the scene in the 1840s, when he was employed by James Weller Ladbroke to make designs for the continued development of the estate. He was responsible not only for the layout of this part of the Ladbroke estate, but also for the design of all the houses in Stanley Gardens and the best of those in Stanley Crescent.

The development of Stanley Gardens and Stanley Crescent was not without its difficulties. The land on which they now stand was considered prime development territory, being high up and above the smogs of London. James Weller Ladbroke first signed a contract with the developer Jacob Connop in 1840 to build a specified number of houses. But Connop went bankrupt shortly afterwards. Ladbroke then let nine acres of the best land to William Sloane (a gentleman who had made a fortune as an indigo planter in Bengal) at £30 an acre, again with an agreement on what houses should be built. But Sloane failed to fulfil the terms of the agreement; and then he died. In 1847, James Weller Ladbroke also died and the estate was inherited by a cousin, Felix Ladbroke, who took back the land on which Stanley Gardens and Crescent now lie. A new developer had by this time arrived on the scene in the person of the merchant-turned-speculator, Charles Blake, and Felix Ladbroke sold the freehold of the land to him. The Survey of London comments that, at £450 an acre, the price paid by Blake was low, perhaps because Ladbroke wished to ensure the development of this site was in accordance with the plans prepared by Allom.

Blake contracted with a builder, David Allan Ramsay, in 1853 to build 40 houses (1-29 Stanley Gardens and 1-13 Stanley Crescent) for a total of £68,000. Thomas Allom produced “surveys, valuations, plans, elevations, sections, specifications” for the houses. Ramsay quickly began running into financial difficulties, however, and left the houses unfinsished. After putting out the work to tender, Blake employed Mssrs. Locke and Nesham to complete Nos. 1-11 Stanley Gardens (the north side) and employed his own Clerk of Works, Philip Rainey, to complete those on the other side. Work was finally finished in 1858, at a cost £11,000 higher than that originally agreed with Ramsay.

Along with the houses in Kensington Park Gardens that Allom also designed, Stanley Gardens and Stanley Crescent represent his masterwork, in terms both of layout (with their cleverly designed communal gardens) and of architecture. Gone completely is the simplicity of the Georgian era still visible in earler houses on the estate. They represent the full-on confident splendour of the Victorian age, or as the Survey of London puts it, “grand display in the latest taste”. The Survey of London comments that “His skill was to make use of the terrace ends, the junctions and the curves in the streets, to introduce special emphasis with great bowed projections, turrets, columnar screens and houses of curious plan forms” – the latter very obvious in the end of terrace houses in Stanley Gardens.

The houses in Stanley Gardens are much higher than earlier houses on the estate (basement, four main floors and a dormer floor added later on the north side); full stucco with lavish external decoration, including balconies, string courses and ironwork; and often equally lavish interior decoration, with stone used in halls and stairways and intricate plasterwork in the rooms. Their rear elevations are also full stucco and equally well-decorated – indeed, in the case of those on the southern side the backs are if anything more ornate than the fronts.

The 1861 census shows the early occupants to have been the usual mix of professionals (several solicitors); merchants or traders; and widows living on their own means. But Nos. 9-10 were occupied by a school for young ladies, as were Nos. 16 and 27; and the street continued to be popular for schools throughout the 19th century. So it seems that it was always easy to find families to take on these very large houses, even in those times of big Victorian families.



This website does not sell maps. Instead it offers a subscription service via Substack using which you can download unlimited maps.

Find out how to use the service by clicking ABOUT above and finding the section which says How to use the mapping service.


Main source: Ladbroke Association
Further citations and sources



NEARBY LOCATIONS OF NOTE
Coach and Horses The Coach & Horses was situated at 108 Notting Hill Gate.
Earl of Zetland The Earl of Zetland - a pub in the Potteries
Horbury Chapel (Kensington Temple) In September 1849, the Horbury Chapel, Notting Hill was officially opened.
Kensington Hippodrome The Kensington Hippodrome was a racecourse built in Notting Hill, London, in 1837, by entrepreneur John Whyte.
Ladbroke Square Garden Ladbroke Square communal garden lies in Notting Hill.
Mercury Theatre The Mercury Theatre was situated at 2a Ladbroke Road, next to the Kensington Temple.
Notting Hill in Bygone Days Notting Hill in Bygone Days by Florence Gladstone, was originally published in 1924 by T. Fisher Unwin.
St John’s Notting Hill St John’s Notting Hill is a Victorian Anglican church built in 1845 in Lansdowne Crescent, Notting Hill.
St John’s Hill St John’s Hill is the highest point in the area.
The Brittania The Brittania was situated on the corner of Clarendon Road and Portland Road, W11.
The Crown The Crown was situated at 57 Princedale Road.

NEARBY STREETS
Agauana House, W11 Agauana House is located on Westbourne Grove (Notting Hill)
Archer Street, W11 Archer Street was renamed Westbourne Grove in 1938 (Notting Hill)
Artesian House, W2 Artesian House is a block on Artesian Road (Notting Hill)
Artesian Road, W2 Artesian Road lies just over the boundary into Paddington from Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Arundel Gardens, W11 Arundel Gardens was built towards the end of the development of the Ladbroke Estate, in the early 1860s (Notting Hill)
Aston House, W11 Aston House is a building on Portobello Road (Notting Hill)
Blenheim Crescent, W11 Blenheim Crescent one of the major thoroughfares in Notting Hill - indeed it features in the eponymous film (Notting Hill)
Bolton Road, W11 Bolton Road was eventually replaced by the 1949-built Portobello Court Estate (Notting Hill)
Buckingham Court, W11 Buckingham Court is a block on Kensington Park Road (Notting Hill)
Bulmer Mews, W11 Bulmer Mews is a tiny mews behind Notting Hill Gate (Notting Hill Gate)
Camelford Road, W11 Lowerwood Court is a block on Westbourne Park Road (Notting Hill)
Camelford Road, W11 Archer House is a block on Westbourne Grove (Notting Hill)
Camelford Road, W11 St George’s Road (St Georges Road) was renamed Camelford Road after 1911 (Notting Dale)
Campden Hill Towers, W11 Campden Hill Towers is a block (Notting Hill Gate)
Chepstow Court, W11 Chepstow Court is a block on Chepstow Villas (Notting Hill)
Chepstow Crescent, W11 Chepstow Crescent is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Chepstow Villas, W11 Chepstow Villas is a road in W11 with a chequered history (Notting Hill)
Clarendon Cross, W11 Clarendon Cross is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Dale)
Clarendon Road, W11 Clarendon Road is one of the W11’s longest streets, running from Holland Park Avenue in the south to Dulford Street in the north (Notting Hill)
Codrington Mews, W11 This attractive L-shaped mews lies off Blenheim Crescent between Kensington Park Road and Ladbroke Grove (Notting Hill)
Colville Gardens, W11 Colville Gardens was laid out in the 1870s by the builder George Frederick Tippett, who developed much of the rest of the neighbourhood (Notting Hill)
Colville Mews, W11 Colville Mews is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Colville Road, W11 Colville Road is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Colville Square, W11 Colville Square is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Colville Terrace, W11 Colville Terrace, W11 has strong movie connnections (Notting Hill)
Convent Gardens, W11 Convent Gardens is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Cornwall Crescent, W11 Cornwall Crescent belongs to the third and final period of building on the Ladbroke estate (Notting Hill)
Cornwall Road, W11 Cornwall Road was once the name for the westernmost part of Westbourne Park Road (Notting Hill)
Courtnell Street, W2 Courtnell Street is a street in Paddington (Westbourne Green)
Dale Row, W11 Dale Row is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Daley Thompson House, W11 Daley Thompson House is a block on Colville Square (Notting Hill)
David Game House, W11 David Game House is a block on Notting Hill Gate (Notting Hill Gate)
Denbigh Close, W11 Denbigh Close is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Denbigh Road, W11 Denbigh Road is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Denbigh Terrace, W11 Denbigh Terrace is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Elgin Crescent, W11 Elgin Crescent runs from Portobello Road west across Ladbroke Grove and then curls round to the south to join Clarendon Road (Notting Hill)
Folly Mews, W11 Folly Mews is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Gate Hill Court, W11 Gate Hill Court is a block on Notting Hill Gate (Notting Hill Gate)
Hippodrome Mews, W11 Hippodrome Mews is a turning off Portland Road, commemorating a lost racecourse (Notting Dale)
Hippodrome Place, W11 Hippodrome Place was named after a lost racecourse of London (Notting Dale)
Horbury Crescent, W11 Horbury Crescent is a short half-moon shaped street between Ladbroke Road and Kensington Park Road (Notting Hill)
Horbury Mews, W11 Horbury Mews is a T-shaped mews in Notting Hill (Notting Hill Gate)
Kenley Walk, W11 Kenley Walk is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Kensington Park Gardens, W11 Kensington Park Gardens is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Kensington Park Mews, W11 Kensington Park Mews lies off of Kensington Park Road (Notting Hill)
Kensington Park Road, W11 Kensington Park Road is one of the main streets in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Ladbroke Crescent, W11 Ladbroke Crescent belongs to the third and final great period of building on the Ladbroke estate and the houses were constructed in the 1860s. (Notting Hill)
Ladbroke Gardens, W11 Ladbroke Gardens runs between Ladbroke Grove and Kensington Park Road (Notting Hill)
Ladbroke Grove, W11 Ladbroke Grove is the main street in London W11 (Notting Hill)
Ladbroke Road, W11 Ladbroke Road is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Ladbroke Square, W11 The huge Ladbroke Square communal garden is part communal garden accessed from the backs of the houses lining it and part traditional London Square with roads between the houses and the square. (Notting Hill)
Ladbroke Terrace, W11 Ladbroke Terrace was one of the first streets to be created on the Ladbroke estate (Notting Hill)
Ladbroke Walk, W11 Ladbroke Walk, W11 is part of the Ladbroke Conversation Area (Notting Hill)
Lambton Place, W11 Lambton Place is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Lansdowne Crescent, W11 Lansdowne Crescent has some of the most interesting and varied houses on the Ladbroke estate, as architects and builders experimented with different styles (Notting Hill)
Lansdowne Rise, W11 Lansdowne Rise, W11 was originally called Montpelier Road (Notting Hill)
Lansdowne Road, W11 Lansdowne Road is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Lansdowne Walk, W11 Lansdowne Walk was named after the Lansdowne area of Cheltenham (Notting Hill)
Ledbury Mews North, W11 Ledbury Mews North is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Ledbury Mews West, W11 This is a street in the W11 postcode area (Notting Hill)
Ledbury Road, W11 Ledbury Road is split between W2 and W11, the postal line intersecting the street (Notting Hill)
Lonsdale Road, W11 Lonsdale Road is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Matlock Court, W11 Matlock Court can be found on Kensington Park Road (Notting Hill)
Moorhouse Road, W2 Moorhouse Road is a street in Paddington (Westbourne Green)
Needham Road, W11 Needham Road was formerly Norfolk Road (Notting Hill)
Notting Hill Gate, W8 Notting Hill Gate is a main shopping and retail street (Notting Hill Gate)
Pembridge Crescent, W11 Pembridge Crescent is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Pembridge Gardens, W2 Pembridge Gardens dates from the 1850s (Notting Hill Gate)
Pembridge Mews, W11 Pembridge Mews is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Pembridge Place, W2 Pembridge Place is a street in Notting Hill
Pembridge Place, W2 Pembridge Place is a road in the W2 postcode area
Pembridge Road, W11 Pembridge Road is a street in London (Notting Hill Gate)
Pembridge Road, W2 Pembridge Road is the former southern end of Portobello Lane. (Notting Hill)
Pembridge Villas, W11 Pembridge Villas is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Pencombe Mews, W11 Pencombe Mews is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Penzance Place, W11 Penzance Place is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Pinehurst Court, W11 Pinehurst Court is a mansion block at 1-9 Colville Gardens (Notting Hill)
Portland Road, W11 Portland Road is a street in Notting Hill, rich at one end and poor at the other (Notting Hill)
Portobello Court, W11 Portobello Court is a block on Portobello Court (Notting Hill)
Portobello Street, W11 Bolton Road became Portobello Street in 1938 (Notting Hill)
Pottery Lane, W11 Pottery Lane takes its name from the brickfields which were situated at the northern end of the street (Notting Hill)
Powis Square, W11 Powis Square is a square between Talbot Road and Colville Terrace (Notting Hill)
Princedale Road, W11 Princedale Road was formerly Princes Road (Notting Hill)
Princes House, W11 Princes House is a block on Kensington Park Road (Notting Hill)
Rosehart Mews, W11 Rosehart Mews is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Rosmead Road, W11 Rosmead Road, W11 was originally called Chichester Road (Notting Hill)
Sarum House, W11 Sarum House is a block on Portobello Road (Notting Hill)
Simon Close, W11 Simon Close is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
St Georges Road, W11 St Georges Road possibly dated from the 1890s (Notting Dale)
St John’s Gardens, W11 St John’s Gardens runs around St John’s church (Notting Hill)
St John’s Mews, W11 St John’s Mews is a redeveloped mews off of Ledbury Road (Notting Hill)
St Mark’s Place, W11 St Mark’s Place is situated on the site of the former Kensington Hippodrome (Notting Hill)
Stanley Crescent, W11 Stanley Crescent was named after the noted politician Edward Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby, who became Prime Minister in 1852 (Notting Hill)
Stanley Gardens Mews, W11 Stanley Gardens Mews existed between 1861 and the mid 1970s (Notting Hill)
Stanley Gardens, W11 Stanley Gardens was built in the 1850s. (Notting Hill)
Testerton Walk, W11 Testerton Walk is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Thornbury Court, W11 Thornbury Court is a block on Chepstow Villas (Notting Hill)
Twisaday House, W11 Twisaday House is a block on Colville Square (Notting Hill)
United House, W11 United House is a block on Pembridge Road (Notting Hill Gate)
Vernon Yard, W11 Vernon Yard is a mews off of Portobello Road (Notting Hill)
Victoria Gardens, W11 Victoria Gardens is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill Gate)
Victoria Mews, W11 Victoria Mews is a location in London (Notting Hill Gate)
Wellington Close, W11 Wellington Close is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Westbourne Grove Mews, W11 Westbourne Grove Mews is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Westbourne Grove, W11 Westbourne Grove is one of the main roads of Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Wilby Mews, W11 Wilby Mews was maybe named after Benjamin Wilby who was involved in several 19th century development schemes (Notting Hill)


Click here to explore another London street
We now have 682 completed street histories and 46818 partial histories


Click here to see photos of the area


  Contact us · Copyright policy · Privacy policy

32730:21790