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In High-Change in Bond Street (1796), James Gillray caricatured the lack of courtesy on Bond Street (young men taking up the whole footpath), which was a grand fashionable milieu at the time. There is evidence of Roman settlement around what is now Bond Street. In 1894, a culvert made from brick and stone was discovered in the area. [7]
Bond Street is an interchange station in Mayfair, in the West End of London for London Underground and Elizabeth line services. Entrances are on Oxford Street , near its junction with New Bond Street , and on Hanover Square .
The street is immediately to the north of the Royal Academy of Arts [2] and joins Old Bond Street and New Bond Street in the west and Vigo Street in the east. Cork Street, Savile Row and Old Burlington Street all run north from Burlington Gardens.
Bond Street: £320 £160 £806,000 W1: There is no actual Bond Street; it is split into New Bond Street to the north and Old Bond Street to the south. [28] Station Liverpool Street station: £200 N/A £784,000 EC2: Principal services: Norwich, Cambridge, Stansted Airport, Southend Victoria: Dark blue Park Lane: £350 £175 £1,700,000 W1 ...
Burlington Arcade is a covered shopping arcade in London, England, United Kingdom. It is 196 yards (179 m) long, parallel to and east of Bond Street from Piccadilly through to Burlington Gardens. It is one of the precursors of the mid-19th-century European shopping gallery and the world's first modern shopping mall. [1]
The syndicate also built Bond Street and Albemarle Street. The street is named after Henry Jermyn, 1st Baron Dover, one of the partners in the syndicate. [2] In June 1797 John Nash moved into 28 Dover Street, a building of his own design; he built an even bigger house next door at 29 into which he moved the following year. [3]
Aeolian Hall, at 135–137 New Bond Street, London, began life as the Grosvenor Gallery, being built by Coutts Lindsay in 1876, an accomplished amateur artist with a predeliction for the aesthetic movement, for which he was held up to some ridicule. In 1883, he decided to light his gallery with electricity.
London transport portal Marble Arch is a London Underground station near Marble Arch in the City of Westminster . It is on the Central line between Lancaster Gate and Bond Street stations, and is in Travelcard Zone 1 .