The buildings suffered badly from bomb damage during World War II. However, following the war, architect Charles Bernard Brown valiantly made it his cause to restore the buildings. From 1947-58, the whole crescent was restored and converted to the apartments that lie here today. Missing interiors and brickwork were replaced ‘like for like’, using salvage recovered from the great Georgian townhouses of central London that were bombed or demolished after the war.
The Grand Tour
A front door on the upper ground floor opens to a grand communal hall. The front door to this apartment lies to the left and opens to a generous hallway, from which all the rooms radiate.
The living room lies to the rear of the plan and has an enormous window that overlooks the garden. Indeed, all principal rooms are bathed in sunlight by floor-to-ceiling glazing and have bucolic views of the large communal gardens to the front and rear. Parquet flooring runs underfoot throughout, and neutral decoration allows the quality of the architecture to truly sing.
The contemporary kitchen and bathroom have both been impeccably designed. The kitchen is of a very high specification, with appliances by Siemens, a Corian worksurface and cabinetry by Poggenpohl. The large bedroom shares the same aesthetic sensibility as the rest of the home and has deep wardrobes for storage.
The Great Outdoors
There are extensive communal gardens to both the front and rear of The Paragon. This is a wonderfully verdant space, put to good use with an annual residents summer barbeque.
Out and About
The Paragon forms the northern boundary to the Cator Estate, which is made up of 282 acres of private roads and features architectural jewels from all ages; from classical villas built at its inception in the late Georgian period to the modernism of Eric Lyons’s Span Housing. Blackheath Village is under a ten-minute walk from The Paragon and is renowned for its community spirit, the plethora of thriving independent shops and eateries and its much-loved weekly farmers’ market. The house is a short walk to Brooklands Primary School, one of the best primary schools in the Borough of Greenwich and OFSTED-rated “outstanding”.
Blackheath mainline railway station is approximately a 15-minute walk away and is one stop from the Docklands Light Railway, for easy access to both the Docklands and the City. Trains from Blackheath take approximately 10 minutes to London Bridge, approximately 25 minutes to Victoria, approximately 22 minutes to Charing Cross and approximately 20 minutes to Cannon Street.
Tenure: Leasehold with Share of Freehold
Lease Length: approx. 985 years remaining
Service Charge: approx. £2,172
Ground Rent: n/a