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Pelham Place, London SW7. Pelham Place is a street of Grade II* listed Georgian terraced houses in South Kensington, London, England. Pelham Place runs north to south from Pelham Place to Pelham Crescent. 2-14 is a circa 1825 terrace. [1] 1-29 is an 1833 terrace, designed by the architect George Basevi. [2] 1-29 is similarly grade II listed. [3]
The Guoman Tower Hotel [6] (formerly Thistle) near Tower Bridge is one of the largest hotels in London, with over 800 bedrooms, and is regarded by some as one of the ugliest - it was twice voted the second ugliest building in London, in a 2005 Time Out poll, and in a 2006 BBC poll [7] - and most insensitively located brutalist buildings in the ...
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Park House was created from a pair of lodges, Pelham Cottage and Park Cottage built in the 1840s that were merged into a single property in the 1980s. [1] The house was owned by Mark Birley who lived there with his wife Annabel Goldsmith. Goldsmith wrote a memoir, No Invitation Required: The Pelham Cottage Years about her time at the house. [2]
The Montcalm Hotels are a group of luxury hotels in Central London, United Kingdom.. The group includes three hotels: (The Montcalm Marble Arch, The Montcalm at The Brewery and The Montcalm Royal London House) [1] under the label "The Montcalm London", and four others (The Marble Arch London, The Chilworth, The Piccadilly London West End and The Barbican Rooms) as "Montcalm Townhouse".
Bailey's Hotel was one of the earliest privately built hotels in London, built between 1874 and 1876 by Aldin and Sons under the command of James Bailey, a hotelier. [2] He erected the hotel in an upmarket location so as to attract London's aristocracy and wealthier inhabitants and to be easily accessible through Gloucester Road tube station.