Bryanston Square

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File:Bryanston Square - geograph.org.uk - 374401.jpg
The green centre and west, north and east façades of some of the Square's homes and the portico and cupola of the church on the horizon after the rectangle has narrowed to form Wyndham Place.
A map showing the Bryanston Square ward of St Marylebone Metropolitan Borough as it appeared in 1916.

Bryanston Square is a long rectangular terraced square in Marylebone, Westminster, London, England, originally of 50 sequential numbers however some of which have been combined such as the Swiss Embassy in London.

Amenities and neighbours

Wyndham Place

St Mary's, Bryanston Square in the Church of England is beyond its northern end along its short (thus in this context and under its building plan which was constructed considered) continuation: Wyndham Place. The church is listed in the top category and was designed in 1821 by Robert Smirke.

Great Cumberland Street

A similar distance to the south along its southern narrowed continuation, broadening in the middle into a small crescent is Western Marble Arch Synagogue. The projection is Great Cumberland Street which is approximately one third of the width as measured from building to building. The thoroughfare culminates with the Marble Arch before which the street is flanked by Cumberland Court and the Cumberland Hotel which incorporates the tube station. Its uses vary between residential use and hotel use.

Architectural context and features

Beyond half of its mews is Montagu Square to the east and beyond a few similarly ornate streets is the Paddington and Marylebone-dividing Edgware Road. Bryanston Square is of approximately equal area to Portman Square. It has wide roads, many buildings of which have listed status, and a private tree-lined garden. Wetherby Preparatory School occupies part of the block from the south west corner. Listed are:

  • Numbers 25-26[1]
  • Numbers 28-32[2]
  • Numbers 44-48[3]

Colour and height and neat façades make the square geometric and yet differentiated. Slightly varied yellowy-brown brickwork from address to address (historically referred to as 'yellow bricks') is accompanied in by differing mansard roofs, mostly of grey slate — a minority is of red-brown bricks. Decorative black balconies above the first level are accompanied by a white chamfered band course at the penultimate level before the mansard. At the divide of the mansards or parapet roofs with roof gardens is a longer such course forming a more pronounced white band course which is a cornice. All of the casements are tall white, multi-pane sash windows of uniform height and distribution.[1][2][3]

In the south is the William Pitt Byrne Memorial Fountain, erected in 1862, a Grade II (initial category) listed monument under the statutory protection scheme,[4] as is an ornamental water pump at the opposite end.[5] Two other buildings form the bulk of the equally interrupted southern façade, listed, 63 and 68 George Street.

Ambassadorial presence

History

Named after its founder Henry William Portman's home village of Bryanston in Dorset, it was built as part of the Portman Estate between 1810 and 1815, along with Montagu Square beyond a mews to the east.

Notable people

References

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  7. Maryna Fraser, ‘Bailey, Sir Abraham , first baronet (1864–1940)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, May 2006 accessed 25 Aug 2008

External links

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