
This handsome Victorian stucco-fronted townhouse is positioned on Pembridge Villas, a wide tree-lined road in Notting Hill, close to the ever-desirable Westbourne Grove and Portobello Road. Built in 1850, within the Pembridge Conservation Area, the four-bedroom house is set out over five storeys with internal accommodation extending to almost 2,000 sq ft. The interior has a beautifully simple design, focusing on honest materials; chalky white walls and pale grey-painted pitch pine floorboards enhance excellent levels of natural light throughout the house. The home also benefits from a private and spacious west-facing roof terrace.
Setting the Scene
After the successful development of Paddington in the early 19th century, Kensington was expanded and Pembridge Villas was built. Formerly agricultural land with several prior Roman settlements nearby, the road formed part of some 28 acres of land owned by James Weller Ladbroke, who gave his name to several prominent neighbouring thoroughfares. This area formed a small part of his greater land west of Portobello Lane.
Set behind white entrance piers and cast-iron spearhead railings, this house is in the middle of a terrace of five-storey houses. Lying on the eastern side of Pembridge Villas, the houses have basement rooms and top dormer floors. Built in a mildly Italianate style, fenestration comprises tall six/six box sash windows with upper apertures framed by fine plaster mouldings. Entablatures are supported by decorative corbels on the piano nobile. The entrance porch is set within two Doric pilasters; an elegant cornice with an egg-and-dart motif rests above this and the adjacent canted bay window. For more information, please see the History section below.
History
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