place

Regent's Business School London

1997 establishments in EnglandBusiness schools in EnglandEducation in the City of WestminsterEducational institutions established in 1997London building and structure stubs
Regent's University LondonUnited Kingdom university stubs
Regent's college 03
Regent's college 03

Regent's Business School London (informally Regent's Business School, RBS London or RBSL) is a private business school located in London, United Kingdom. The school is a part of Regent's University London the campus of which was originally built in 1913 in the midst of Regent's Park in central London. Founded in 1997, it has grown rapidly from 10 students to more than 450. The student body is primarily international, with a large population of students from the Persian Gulf region, Asia, Northern and Eastern Europe.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Regent's Business School London (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Regent's Business School London
York Bridge, City of Westminster Marylebone

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Website Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Regent's Business School LondonContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.5259 ° E -0.1553 °
placeShow on map

Address

Regent's University

York Bridge
NW1 4NS City of Westminster, Marylebone
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Website
regents.ac.uk

linkVisit website

Regent's college 03
Regent's college 03
Share experience

Nearby Places

Chiltern Court
Chiltern Court

Chiltern Court, Baker Street, London, is a large block of flats at the street's northern end, facing Regent's Park and Marylebone Road. It was built between 1927 and 1929 above the Baker Street tube station by the Metropolitan Railway. Originally intended as a hotel and as its company headquarters, and begun in 1912, the Metropolitan's plans were interrupted by the First World War. When construction recommenced in the late 1920s, the building was redesigned as a block of flats and the Chiltern Court Restaurant. The architect was Charles Walter Clark. During the 1930s the block was home to a number of notable figures, including the writers H. G. Wells, who held a weekly literary salon at his apartment, and Arnold Bennett, who died at the court in 1931. The composer Eric Coates lived in the block between 1930-36, and the cartoonist David Low was also a resident. During World War II, the Special Operations Executive was based at 64 Baker Street, and its Norwegian Section was located in three flats at Chiltern Court, from where it directed the operations against the heavy water plant at Telemark. Chiltern Court is not listed, being specifically excluded from the listing designation for Baker Street tube station. It is recorded in Pevsner, where it is described as "a stately classical pile, the grandest [of the] mansion flats" in the vicinity. The Chiltern Court Restaurant, now a bar, was referenced by John Betjeman in his television programme from 1973, Metro-land.