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Inventory Site Record

Belgrave Square Gardens * (Westminster)

Brief Description

* on The National Heritage List for England, Parks & Gardens

Belgrave Square was designed by architect George Basevi, who laid out the square and the gardens were first planted by Thomas Cubitt in 1826. They have been restored to the layout of 1867, and have lawns, large plane trees, pergolas with wisteria, roses and annuals, a quiet garden, tennis court and play area for children. In 2008 the original viewing mound in the centre of the garden was re-instated and among the trees are those that date from the original plantings. Within the garden is a collection of statuary, including modern figurative works.

Practical Information
Site location:
Belgrave Square, Belgravia
Postcode:
SW1X 8PG
What 3 Words:
pump.season.glass
Type of site:
Garden Square
Borough:
Westminster
Open to public?
Occasionally
Opening times:
Has opened for OGSW, otherwise private with access to any resident on Grosvenor Belgravia Estate
Has taken part in Open Garden Squares Weekend 25 times, most recently in 2024.
Special conditions:
No music, no wheeled vehicles or bicycles other than wheelchairs, children's tricycles, prams, pushchairs; no ball games by anyone over 5 years old.
Facilities:
Playground; tennis court. Tree Guide leaflet
Events:
Temporary displays of public art from Cass Foundation Goodwood Sculpture Park
Public transport:
Rail: Victoria. Tube: Victoria (Victoria, District, Circle), Hyde Park Corner (Piccadilly). Bus: C1, 2, 9, 10, 14, 16, 22, 36, 38, 52, 73, 74, 82, 137, 148, 414, 436
Research updated:
01/06/2010
Last minor changes:
14/07/2022

Please check with the site owner or manager for latest news. www.grosvenor-gardens.co.uk/BelgraveSquareGarden

Full Site Description

The Grosvenor Estate (Belgrave Square, Chester Square, Eaton Square and Wilton Crescent): Site on The National Heritage List for England, Parks & Gardens, for Register Entry see https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list. The Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission for England was established in 1984 and was commonly called English Heritage. In April 2015 it split into 2 separate entities, Historic England (HE), which continues to champion and protect the historic environment, and the English Heritage Trust, whose role is to look after the 400+ historic sites and monuments owned by the state. HE manages the National Heritage List for England (NHLE) that includes over 400,000 items ranging from prehistoric monuments to office blocks, battlefields and parks, which benefit from legal protection.

Belgrave Square, Eaton Square, Chester Square and Wilton Crescent (q.q.v.) were on land formerly known as Five Fields on the Grosvenor Estate's holdings in Belgravia. In 1677 the family had acquired c.121 hectares of land within the Manor of Ebury, but this area remained undeveloped and largely used for market gardening until the early C19th, due to its predominantly marshy nature. In 1821 Lord Grosvenor, 1st Duke of Westminster, commissioned his surveyor, Thomas Cundy, to revise an earlier unexecuted scheme produced by Thomas or James Wyatt in c.1812, for draining and developing the site immediately to the north of John Nash's remodelled Buckingham Palace (q.v.). Cundy's plan, which added Wilton Crescent to the planned Belgrave and Eaton Squares, was completed in 1825 and building leases were then sold, with the main developer being Thomas Cubitt (1788-1855). The overall plan comprised a series of squares and crescents connected by a spine road on the main axis and a subsidiary axis. Under the original agreement, Lord Grosvenor was responsible for the enclosing and planting of the gardens but not for the considerable site works necessary before any planting could begin. Cubitt solved the problem of the marshy ground by bringing earth excavated from St Katharine's Dock near the Tower of London in order to raise the height of the ground. Belgrave Square was the first square to be laid out early in 1826, followed by Wilton Crescent in 1827. Eaton Square, also begun in 1827 was not completed until 1853. Chester Square was the fourth square to be laid out but although it was planned in 1828 it was not begun until 1835.

The development of Belgrave Square was begun in 1825 by Thomas Cubitt, with George Basevi as architect, and completion of the square was c.1827. Belgrave Square is named after the Leicestershire village of Belgrave, one of the Grosvenor family properties. The quantity of earth and soil needed for the garden may have come from the Lowndes Estate across the Ranelagh Sewer or from the excavations then going on for St Katharine's Dock. Basevi laid an estimate for the making of the 'enclosure' before Lord Grosvenor in June 1826, and was told firmly that he would 'allow £2,700 if Mr Basevi or his Employer will do it, or his Lordship will execute it himself if they object to that'. An arrangement was reached by which John Allen, one of the original garden tenants, was to be approached by Cundy to make the garden. Basevi was to arrange for the actual enclosing of the central garden with appropriate rails and granite curb. John Allen, who had a nursery garden at the west end of Eaton Square and planted Eaton Square, appears to have turned the job for Belgrave Square down.

The very extent and size of the trees in the garden prevent the Square from reading as an architectural unity today. The railed garden enclosure is surrounded by a belt of shrubbery that encloses a peripheral path, with lesser paths running through lawn towards the centre of the garden. The lawn at the centre is raised to a `mount' with an area of rose bedding. This inner circle has a perimeter path with a number of small classical-style shelters and wooden pergolas with roses and lavender, with lesser clumps of shrubbery around the central area. Mature trees in the gardens include fine plane trees, lime, ash, chestnut and acacia, with smaller trees and shrubbery including bamboo, flowering cherry, fatsia, holly, laburnum, laurel, lilac, mahonia, philadelphus and thorn. In the south-west centre of the garden are tennis courts and a shelter. A small garden was created for the Millennium donated by the 6th Duke of Westminster, reached through a gate with a metal arch. It has a central steel sundial in the shape of a globe with etched inscriptions and is on a stone plinth from which four paved paths radiate, between which are four beds with box hedges, and planting includes alium and euphorbia, each having a vertical wooden trellis feature.

Around the external perimeter of the gardens are a number of sculptural works in bronze of explorers and historical figures set on stone plinths. These include Prince Henry the Navigator (1394-1460), the Portuguese prince whose sailors travelled to uncharted parts of the ocean during the Portuguese wars against the Moors. He later set up an observatory and navigation school whose pupils travelled widely, for example discovering the Madeira Islands and exploring the West African coast as far as Sierra Leone; on the outer eastern corner is a memorial dated 1974 to Simon Bolivar (1783-1830), the revolutionary leader who liberated South America from the Spanish; General Jose de San Martin (1778-1850), Argentinean national hero who was important in the independence of Argentina, Chile and Peru from Spain; and Christopher Columbus (1451-1506). Within the gardens to the north is a Homage to Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) erected in 1982, and also a bust of George Basevi, the architect of Belgrave Square. A 1998 statue of Sir Robert Grosvenor by Jonathan Wylder is at the corner of Wilton Crescent, inscribed with a quote by John Ruskin: 'When we build, let us think we build for ever.'

Sources consulted:

Country Life, 8 May 1969, p. 1154-57; E. Beresford Chancellor, The History of the Squares of London, 1907, p.342-343; Simon Bradley and Nikolaus Pevsner, 'The Buildings of England London 6: Westminster', (Yale University Press, 2003); Hermione Hobhouse, 'Thomas Cubitt, Masterbuilder', 1971, p.131-132. Chambers Biographical Dictionary, edited by Magnus Magnusson (5th edition, 1990). See www.grosvenor.com

Further Information (Planning and Conservation)
Grid ref:
TQ283794 (528260,179420)
Size in hectares:
2
Site ownership:
Grosvenor Estate
Site management:
Grosvenor Estate Gardens Department/Belgrave Square Garden Committee. Charge gardener Jose Redondo
Date(s):
1825, 1867
Designer(s):
1826: Thomas Cubitt/George Basevi
Listed structures:
LBI: nos. 1 - 11, 12 (+ railings/gate piers LBII*), 13 - 23, 24, 25 - 36, 38 - 48.LBII*: no. 49 + railings/gate piers; LBII: no. 11a.
On National Heritage List for England (NHLE), Parks & Gardens:

Yes
NHLE grade:
Grade II
Registered common or village green on Commons Registration Act 1965:

No
Protected under London Squares Preservation Act 1931:

Yes

Local Authority Data

The information below is taken from the relevant Local Authority's planning legislation, which was correct at the time of research but may have been amended in the interim. Please check with the Local Authority for latest planning information.

On Local List:
No
In Conservation Area:
Yes
Conservation Area name:
Belgravia
Tree Preservation Order:
Yes
Nature Conservation Area:
Yes - Borough Importance II
Green Belt:
No
Metropolitan Open Land:
No
Special Policy Area:
Yes
Other LA designation:
None
Photos

Belgrave Square Gardens *

Belgrave Square - Photo: Colin Wing
Date taken: 10/06/23 15:32

Photo: Pamela Paterson (1995)
1995
Photo: Pamela Paterson (1995)
1995
Photo: Pamela Paterson (1995)
1995
Photo: Pamela Paterson (1995)
1995

Click a photo to enlarge.

More photos

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