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Where to live in Belsize Park

September 30th, 2008 by | No Comments | Filed in Belsize Park

Belsize Park is essentially the area immediately west of Haverstock Hill. Belsize Village, as it is now known, is centred on Belsize Lane. Some of the best properties in this area are in Parkhill Road, Park Road and North Road. There are flats in Haverstock Hill, and there are some large mansion blocks there. Belsize Avenue is the centre of the area. To the north, there are attractive houses in roads leading to Lyndhurst Gardens and Wedderburn Road. Belsize Park, Belsize Park Gardens and Belsize Square run to the south. These all contain attractive houses, many converted into flats. “The Glens” – Glenloch, Glenilla and Glenmore Roads – close to the tube station contain sought after Victorian terraced houses. Between Belsize Park and Chalk Farm there are more terraced houses in the group of streets containing Primrose Gardens and surrounding streets. Antrim Mansions is a large mansion block in Antrim Road. Nearly at Chalk Farm, Steels Road and surrounding streets contain some of the largest houses in the area.

Belsize Park history

September 28th, 2008 by | No Comments | Filed in Belsize Park

You won’t be surpised to know that Belsize Park was a park; but no-one seems to know where the ‘Belsize’ bit of Belsize Park comes from.  The Countess of Chesterfield had a large manor house with extensive grounds built in Belsize Park in the 1660s.  A rather enterprising coal merchant bought the estate in the 1700s and ran a business on the side, offering cheap weddings in the manor house and wedding parties in the grounds, on condition that he did the catering.  Later owners found other business-making opportunities and Belsize Park was used for racing, dancing, and deer hunting.  The Belsize Park manor house became a normal private house again in the later 18th century and Spencer Percival, a prime minister, lived there.  (He may even come in as the least memorable prime minister of all time - until Gordon Brown got him off the bottom of the league table.) In 1854, as trains lines arrived along with the middle classes, the manor house was demolished and most of the grounds of Belsize Park were developed as the Belsize Park residential area of today.