Houses in Chesham Place
Houses in Chesham Place
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Houses in Chesham Place
SC_PHL_01_456_70_8967 (Collage 128233)
London Metropolitan Archives: LCC Photograph Library
A view of the front elevations of grand houses at 29-37 Chesham Place, Belgravia. Numbers 34 to 37 are scaffolded at full height and surrounded by a hoarding. The houses have four storeys and an attic storey over a basement and are three or four windows wide, except for Chesham House at 30 and 31, which is wider and whose access is at the rear. The front elevation of number 37 nearest the camera is in Lowndes Place to the left, where it is four windows wide. The front doors sit under porches supported on Tuscan columns decorated with a frieze with triglyphs. A rubble chute runs from the first floor of number 36 over the pavement. A number of cars are parked in the road including a BMC1100 and a Fiat 124S. Dating from the early to mid-19th century, numbers 29-37 Chesham Place were Grade II listed in 1970, listing number 1066264. Chesham House housed the Russian embassy from 1853 until the formation of the Soviet Union in May 1927. A blue plaque on number 37 records that it was the home of Lord John Russell (1792-1878), twice prime minister.
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