Dorset Square

Dorset Square is a garden square in Marylebone, London. All buildings fronting it are terraced houses and listed, in the mainstream (initial) category. It takes up the site of Lord's (MCC's) Old Cricket Ground, which lasted 23 years until the 1811 season. Internally it spans 100,000 square feet (9,290 m2).

Dorset Square

Location

The immediate vicinity of Dorset Square.
A map showing the Dorset Square ward of St Marylebone Metropolitan Borough as it appeared in 1916.

Approach ways

It is one 84-metre block north of Marylebone Road and lends its name to the roads on all four sides, in typical fashion the east side forms a pause in the numbering and scope of Gloucester Place; the west does so as to Balcombe Street. The south side links:

  • to the west Melcombe Place which behind the square's largest house/building (№s 26 to 28, known as 28) to the west fronts the ticket hall (with food, drink and supermarket outlets) of Marylebone station (formerly Harewood Square) and the Landmark Hotel.
  • to the east Melcombe Street (formerly New Street) which ends two main blocks away at Baker Street.

Site history

Dorset Square takes up (1787-founded) Lord's Old Ground the closure of which at the end of 1810's season was brought about by a sought rent increase.[1]

Buildings

Dodie Smith blue plaque, 18 Dorset Square
Laurence Gomme blue plaque, 24 Dorset Square

The buildings are 250 feet (76 m) or 400 feet (120 m) apart (north-to-south, east-to-west).

Dorset Square Hotel, created in 1985, can be found on the south side of the square, at 39-40 Dorset Square [2]

All sides (east, №s1-8; north №s9-20; west №s21-28; south №s29-40) are Grade II listed buildings.[3] The Embassy of El Salvador is at № 8. № 1 currently houses the London branch of Alliance Française but during WWII functioned as its international headquarters when the original in Paris was closed.[4] A plaque by the front door commemorates the building's history as the site from which agents of the French Resistance were equipped for, and dispatched to, undercover missions in Occupied France.

Notable residents

In birth order:

gollark: ***WEBSOCKET***
gollark: I still don't see why you'd want that.
gollark: The tape backdoor is surprisingly useful. I can do updates/debugging by sticking in a tape to run a Lua REPL.
gollark: Unfortunately the BIOS is only run at sandbox privilege levels, but there's a potatOS API including such functions as update included.
gollark: Technically it's only manual update combined with remote update via #1, but #4 allows me to trigger updates anyway.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.