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Bedford Square is one of the best preserved set pieces of Georgian architecture in London, but most of the houses have now been converted into offices. [20] Numbers 1–10, [ 3 ] 11, [ 21 ] 12–27, [ 22 ] 28–38 [ 23 ] and 40–54 are grade I listed buildings .
Bedford Square's houses were originally seasonal lodging houses. This group of four all have three storeys and dormer windows in their mansard roof; a verandah spans the first three, and all four share an iron balcony. Number 13 has a more elaborate entrance and some stuccoed wall panels. [53] [58] 14 Bedford Square [A] Brighton
Bedford Square, Bloomsbury WC1B 3RA: House: 18th century: 24 October 1951: 1244548: Numbers 28–38 Bedford Square and attached railings: Numbers 40–54 Bedford Square and attached railings Bedford Square, Bloomsbury WC1B 3RA: Terrace: 1776–81: 24 October 1951
Entrance to the Bedford Estate office in Montague Street Looking north across Bloomsbury Square on the Bedford Estate with Bedford House behind, c. 1725, London town house of the Dukes of Bedford Francis Russell, 5th Duke of Bedford, statue by Richard Westmacott in Russell Square on the Bedford Estate John Norden's map of 1593 map, showing the Bedford Covent Garden Estate not long after it was ...
Bedford College was founded in London in 1849 as the first higher education ... and opened the Ladies College in Bedford Square. [4] ... [14] Bedford firsts ...
The NYU London campus is located at 4–6 Bedford Square in Bloomsbury, London. The residence halls are also located in Bloomsbury, near Russell Square. The university's main building, No. 6, was formerly home to the Oxford and Cambridge Musical Club between 1914 and 1940. A centennial concert was held in 2014.
Beaumont Place – after Joseph Beaumont, who built this street in 1791 [13] [14] Bedford Avenue, Bedford Place, Bedford Square and Bedford Way – after local 18th-century landowners the Russell family, earls/dukes of Bedford [15] [16] Belgrove Street – formerly Belgrave Street, thought to be for a Warwickshire locality of this name [17] [18]
The Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art is a scholarly centre in London devoted to supporting original research into the history of British Art. It was founded in 1970 and endowed by a gift from Paul Mellon. Since 1996, it has been situated at 16 Bedford Square in a Grade I listed building.