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Chepstow Place

London road stubsPages containing links to subscription-only contentStreets in the City of WestminsterStreets in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea
Chepstow Place, Ordnance Survey map 1872
Chepstow Place, Ordnance Survey map 1872

Chepstow Place is a street in London that runs from the junction of Westbourne Grove and Pembridge Villas in the north to Pembridge Square in the south. It is crossed by Dawson Place and joined on its eastern side by Rede Place. The east side is in the City of Westminster and the west side in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Chepstow Place (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Chepstow Place
Rede Place, City of Westminster Bayswater

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Wikipedia: Chepstow PlaceContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.513389 ° E -0.194525 °
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Address

Rede Place

Rede Place
W2 4TT City of Westminster, Bayswater
England, United Kingdom
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Chepstow Place, Ordnance Survey map 1872
Chepstow Place, Ordnance Survey map 1872
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Nearby Places

Leinster Square
Leinster Square

Leinster Square () and Prince's Square are mirroring garden squares in Bayswater on the cusp of Westbourne and Notting Hill. One street overlaps (is shared by) the two squares. It is within the large, 1965, additions to the City of Westminster, London, W2. The square is in a broad cluster of Victorian estates of private housing with aesthetic landscaping and architecture. These include Prince's Square of symmetrical design, which the square fronts, Hereford Road and Garway Road. It close to Westbourne Grove, the major retail road running across Notting Hill and Tube stations: Bayswater, Queensway and Notting Hill Gate. Much of the area's war damage in the London Blitz was rapidly repaired with houses rebuilt to match the original tall terraces. Grade II listed tall Victorian terraced houses encompass the square, which, on the Hereford Road side, features a proportion of restaurants and cafés. The buildings have basements with black railings, slate mansard roofs, sash windows and yellow bricks with white stucco projections, pediments and dressings. As of 2015, a string of high-end developments is taking place in the square, with new flats and townhouses built behind the façade of two former hotels.The buildings surrounding the square are listed Grade II on the National Heritage List for England. The buildings are grouped into individual listings as 1–6, 7–16, 17–20, 23–26, 21 and 22, 27–34, and 38–57 Leinster Square.35–37 and 58–64 and Leinster Square are listed in two groups with buildings in adjacent Prince's Square.