place

Portland Road, Notting Hill

1850s establishments in EnglandNotting HillStreets in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea
Portland Road, Notting Hill
Portland Road, Notting Hill

Portland Road is a road in Notting Hill, in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea that was built as a speculative development in the 1850s. The road has been noted for its division into three sections of different wealth: the section between Holland Park Avenue and Clarendon Cross/Hippodrome Place being one of the most expensive places to buy a house in London, a section of terraced houses further north being also very expensive but less so than the lower reaches of the road, and a section at the northern end that was once slums and is now working class social housing and is described as being north of an "invisible line" that divides it from the privately owned sections of the road.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Portland Road, Notting Hill (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Portland Road, Notting Hill
Portland Road, London Notting Hill (Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Portland Road, Notting HillContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.50985 ° E -0.2102 °
placeShow on map

Address

Portland Road 119
W11 4LJ London, Notting Hill (Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea)
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Portland Road, Notting Hill
Portland Road, Notting Hill
Share experience

Nearby Places

St James' Church, Norlands
St James' Church, Norlands

St James' Church, Norlands, is a historic listed church in London, United Kingdom. It is affiliated with the Church of England. It was designed by architects Lewis Vulliamy and Robert Jewell Withers, and its construction was completed in 1845. The church was consecrated on 17 July of the same year. It is listed as Grade II by English Heritage.The church is built of white Suffolk bricks and is orientated east to west with the tower positioned south of the central bay. The entrance is through a porch, built into base of the tower, facing down Addison Avenue. The simple body of the church makes the three-stage tower, built in 1850, stand out. The first stage has gabled Buttresses with roll-moulded edges. The second stage has a clock-face set in on each side and is considerably shorter than any other stage. The final belfry stage has two deeply-recessed paired lancets flanked by single blind lancet panels. There is a drawing in Kensington Public Library which shows that the tower was designed to have been topped with a broach spire, however, this was never built, and the tower seems somewhat abrupt and unfinished without it, as the thin octagonal pinnacles on each corner stand out against the sky. Vulliamy's original design provided polygonal apsidal projections at the east and west ends, but these were never built. In 1876 the eastern end was extended by the architect, R. J. Withers. These extensions provide the present chancel, vestries and an organ chamber.The church is set in a small garden square, which is laid out in an informal style and is mainly two lawn areas with planting at the edges. The views are dominated by the mature chestnut and lime trees which surround the garden. These gardens are private and used by adjacent properties, and only open to the public occasionally.