Survey of London: Volume 38, South Kensington Museums Area

At the core of this volume is a study of the estate in South Kensington and Westminster acquired under the auspices of Prince Albert by the Commissioners for the Great Exhibition of 1851, and developed as a remarkable cultural centre for the applied arts and sciences. In many ways the great sequence of world-famous institutions described here - such as the Victorian and Albert Museum, the National History Museum, the Royal Albert Hall, and the Imperial Institute - is a memorial to the Prince Consort's vision. The book sets out his role in the creation of South Kensington as a centre for art and scholarship, and the parts played by others, such as Queen Victoria herself, Captain Francis Fowke, and Sir Henry Cole (the dynamic first Superintendent of the South Kensington Museum). The High Victorian memorial eventually erected to the prince in Hyde Park is also considered. Part of the Commissioners' estate was used for house building, and the volume describes the development here and on adjoining lands of the great ranges of Italianate stucco mansions in and around Queen's Gate, Elvaston Place and Cromwell Road, which today give South Kensington its architectural flavour. The emergence after 1870 of the red-brick 'Domestic Revival' idiom in reaction to all this 'builders' classical'-style housing is here exemplified by half-a-dozen important houses and flats by Richard Norman Shaw.

Survey of London. Originally published by London County Council, London, 1975.

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Table of Contents

Title Page(s)
Plate 57: Displays in Western Gallery. 57
Plate 58: Huxley Building, formerly Science Schools 58
Plate 59: Huxley Building, formerly Science Schools, details in c. 1872–7 59
Plate 60: Natural History Museum 60
Plate 61: Natural History Museum 61
Plate 62: Natural History Museum 62
Plate 63: Natural History Museum 63
Plate 64: Natural History Museum 64
Plate 65: Natural History Museum 65
Plate 66: Natural History Museum in 1968 66
Plate 67: City and Guilds College 67
Plate 68: Imperial Institute 68
Plate 69: Imperial Institute. Exterior and Interior view. 69
Plate 70: Imperial Institute. Interior views in 1893– 5. 70
Plate 71: Royal College of Organists and Royal College of Music 71
Plate 72 72
Plate 73 73
Plate 74 74
Plate 75 75
Plate 76 76
Plate 77 77
Plate 78 78
Plate 79 79
Plate 80 80
Plate 81 81
Plate 82 82
Plate 83 83
Plate 84 84
Plate 85: Nos. 47–52 (consec.) Queen's Gate 85
Plate 86 86
Plate 87: No. 30 Queen's Gate Gardens, drawingroom and dining-room in 1896. 87
Plate 88 88
Plate 89 89
Plate 90 90
Plate 91 91
Plate 92 92
Plate 93 93
Plate 94: Palace Gate 94
Plate 95: No. 6 Palace Gate, interiors in 1891. 95
Plate 96: Lowther Lodge, Kensington Gore 96
Plate 97: Lowther Lodge, Kensington Gore 97
Plate 98: No. 196 Queen's Gate 98
Plate 99: No. 196 Queen's Gate, interiors. 99
Plate 100: Albert Hall Mansions 100
Plate 101 101
Plate 102: No. 180 Queen's Gate 102
Plate 103: No. 180 Queen's Gate, interiors in 1956. 103
Plate 104: No. 170 Queen's Gate 104
Plate 105: No. 170 Queen's Gate 105
Plate 106 106
Plate 107 107
Plate 108: No. 179 and No. 178 Queen's Gate in 1890 and c. 1895–8. 108
Plate 109: No. 179 Queen's Gate, interiors in 1891. 109
Plate 110: No. 185 Queen's Gate 110
Plate 111 111
Plate 112: No. 1a Palace Gate 112
Plate 113 113
Plate 114 114
Plate 115: St. Augustine's Church, Queen's Gate 115
Plate 116: St. Augustine's Church, Queen's Gate 116
Plate 117: Holy Trinity Church, Prince Consort Road 117
Plate 118 118