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Extraordinary Grade II-listed early Georgian Home
Extraordinary Grade II-listed early Georgian Home
度假屋提供厨房,邻近利物浦街
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热门服务设施
- 干衣机
- 可带宠物
- 洗衣机
- 室外区域
- 壁炉
- 厨房
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Extraordinary Grade II-listed early Georgian Home
Summary:
Malplaquet House is an extraordinary Grade II-listed early Georgian home with a fascinating history in east London’s Stepney Green conservation area. It was built between 1741 and 1742 and later adapted in the 1790s. It has been fully restored in more recent years in consultation with The Spitalfields Historic Buildings Trust. The house unfolds over four spacious and atmospheric storeys, which contain five bedrooms and measure 4000+ sq ft in total.
The Space:
On Mile End Road, ivy, wisteria, jasmine, climbing roses and creepers grow over tall cast-iron railings to form a mysterious screen, giving few clues to the majestic home that lies behind. A black-and-white marble-tiled pathway leads through the garden to a stone balcony with iron railings and the entrance to the house.
Four storeys high and five bays wide, the house is made of London stock brick, carefully repointed with lime mortar. The entrance hall bisects the plan, with aged pine floorboards and a clear vista directly to the staircase and garden entrance beyond. The sense of history is immediately palpable, with walls scrapped down to their original discoloured paint. All walls in the house feature traditional thin paints and chalks, hand-applied in countless layers by specialist artisans, upon lime plaster.
Two large reception rooms lie on either side of the hall, both with double-aspect windows allowing the rooms to be flooded with light. The west-facing room features a green Florentine marble bolection chimney piece from Lord Rosebery’s demolished townhouse in Berkeley Square. The east-facing room features two bullseye Carrara marble chimneypieces and open iron grates.
Descending to the lower-ground floor rooms, the guest bedroom has beautifully distressed panelling, old cupboards in the alcoves, and a door to the front garden. The chimneypiece is 18th century and from the celebrated meeting place ‘Tom’s Coffee House’ in Covent Garden, which was later demolished when the Royal Opera House was built in its place.
The kitchen is a wonderful room overlooking the garden, equipped with a dining table. The kitchen counter is supported with Victorian table legs, with Swedish green marble used for countertops that once clad the foyer of a 1950s office block. The stoneware sink is reclaimed and features a Vitruvian scroll; the taps are in a crosshead design in antique chrome by Barber Wilson.
Ascending to the first floor, a sitting room is positioned at the front of the plan. Three bays wide, it has an antique fireplace in an Asiatic design made from carved wood, home to an open fire. Panelling remains untreated, and there are doors to the surrounding alcoves.
At the east range on this floor are two connected rooms, separated by wedding doors that remain from the house’s conception in 1741. The rear room is formed of two original panelled ‘closets’, with the original arsenic green décor found beneath layers of wallpaper mounted on hessian secured on battens. The original panelling remains, updated in the 1790s, and cupboards are set into the alcoves. The chimneypiece with ancient marble slips is from a farmhouse in Norfolk. The second room to the front of the house is panelled with remnants of wallpaper from the 1800s.
Also on the first floor are a shower room and a separate WC. The WC was installed in the 1850s and features original cupboards and water pump housing, while the shower is lined with coloured specimen marbles and 19th-century tiles.
The uppermost floor has three bedrooms, a home office and a generously sized bathroom. The office space was once a modest kitchen when the house was used as divided dwellings in the mid-19th century, and a working fluted stoneware sink remains. The west bedroom remains panelled with a cupboard in one alcove containing the original dry closet, a precursor to the WC. The bathroom has aged lime plaster on the walls, with a reddish aged wash applied. A hob grate is set into the fireplace, and two cast-iron roll-top claw foot baths are positioned by the high-set windows. Both are reclaimed, and one has a shower attachment to the tap fittings. This room is a wonderful space to relax in the evenings, a deux.
Guest Access:
Guests will have sole access to the entirety of the home.
The Neighborhood:
Stepney Green and nearby Whitechapel are an incredibly vibrant and centrally located part of east London. A short walk or cycle from both the River Thames and the City, the area offers excellent local amenities. The historic buildings on nearby Whitechapel Road have been extensively and sensitively restored in recent years in consultation with Historic England, presenting a multifarious union of the finest late 19th-century commercial architecture. The original Royal London Hospital building and its façade are being restored for use as the Tower Hamlets new town hall. They complete the full architectural restoration of the area. The green open spaces of Mile End Park, Limehouse Basin, Victoria Park (which provides access to the Regent’s Canal), Stepney Green Park and Stepney City Farm and Cafe are also a short walk away.
The eclectic George Tavern is recommended for drinks and occasional music events on Jubilee Street, while the Whitechapel Gallery and independent Genesis cinema provide cultural distractions. Nearby Spitalfields and Shoreditch offer further opportunities for dining, entertainment and shopping, with restaurants including Ottolenghi, Cecconi’s and St. John Bread & Wine. Spitalfields Market and the surrounding streets now offer shopping opportunities comparable to the West End, and the famous Brick Lane is just a short walk round the corner. Just down the road you will find Genesis cinema - a family owned & independent cinema continuing the tradition of entertaining East London since 1848.
Getting Around:
Transport links are excellent; a 10-minute walk away is Whitechapel underground station, which runs Circle and Hammersmith & City Line services and provides access to the East London branch of the Overground. A one-minute walk away and nearest to Malplaquet House, however, is Stepney Green station, which also runs both District and Hammersmith & City line services. The Elizabeth Line has recently opened and operates from Whitechapel underground station, from which trains run to Paddington station in 14 minutes and Heathrow Airport in 38 minutes. The house also lies immediately upon Cycle Superhighway II, a separate cycle lane directly connecting the City of London to the west and Stratford to the east.
Other Things to Note:
The current Wifi is provided by two dongle routers and given the size of the house the signal may be inconsistent in areas of the house - we are sourcing a permanent solution in the meantime.
The home is very unique in terms of design and function so we suggest anyone looking to book to look at all the photos before doing so as they are a fair reflection of the home and we acknowledge it may not be to everyone's taste.
No open fires
Dogs only
Strictly no parties
Unfortunately we do not allow under 12s
We partner with TRUVI to carry out secure guest ID verification, helping to ensure a safe and trusted stay for all parties. Once you have completed verification with TRUVI, your stay will be protected by Guest Guarantee and you'll benefit from an accidental damage cover.
Interaction with Guests:
We will be on hand throughout your stay to make it as enjoyable as possible for you :) You will be greeted on the day by a member of staff who will show you around!
Malplaquet House is an extraordinary Grade II-listed early Georgian home with a fascinating history in east London’s Stepney Green conservation area. It was built between 1741 and 1742 and later adapted in the 1790s. It has been fully restored in more recent years in consultation with The Spitalfields Historic Buildings Trust. The house unfolds over four spacious and atmospheric storeys, which contain five bedrooms and measure 4000+ sq ft in total.
The Space:
On Mile End Road, ivy, wisteria, jasmine, climbing roses and creepers grow over tall cast-iron railings to form a mysterious screen, giving few clues to the majestic home that lies behind. A black-and-white marble-tiled pathway leads through the garden to a stone balcony with iron railings and the entrance to the house.
Four storeys high and five bays wide, the house is made of London stock brick, carefully repointed with lime mortar. The entrance hall bisects the plan, with aged pine floorboards and a clear vista directly to the staircase and garden entrance beyond. The sense of history is immediately palpable, with walls scrapped down to their original discoloured paint. All walls in the house feature traditional thin paints and chalks, hand-applied in countless layers by specialist artisans, upon lime plaster.
Two large reception rooms lie on either side of the hall, both with double-aspect windows allowing the rooms to be flooded with light. The west-facing room features a green Florentine marble bolection chimney piece from Lord Rosebery’s demolished townhouse in Berkeley Square. The east-facing room features two bullseye Carrara marble chimneypieces and open iron grates.
Descending to the lower-ground floor rooms, the guest bedroom has beautifully distressed panelling, old cupboards in the alcoves, and a door to the front garden. The chimneypiece is 18th century and from the celebrated meeting place ‘Tom’s Coffee House’ in Covent Garden, which was later demolished when the Royal Opera House was built in its place.
The kitchen is a wonderful room overlooking the garden, equipped with a dining table. The kitchen counter is supported with Victorian table legs, with Swedish green marble used for countertops that once clad the foyer of a 1950s office block. The stoneware sink is reclaimed and features a Vitruvian scroll; the taps are in a crosshead design in antique chrome by Barber Wilson.
Ascending to the first floor, a sitting room is positioned at the front of the plan. Three bays wide, it has an antique fireplace in an Asiatic design made from carved wood, home to an open fire. Panelling remains untreated, and there are doors to the surrounding alcoves.
At the east range on this floor are two connected rooms, separated by wedding doors that remain from the house’s conception in 1741. The rear room is formed of two original panelled ‘closets’, with the original arsenic green décor found beneath layers of wallpaper mounted on hessian secured on battens. The original panelling remains, updated in the 1790s, and cupboards are set into the alcoves. The chimneypiece with ancient marble slips is from a farmhouse in Norfolk. The second room to the front of the house is panelled with remnants of wallpaper from the 1800s.
Also on the first floor are a shower room and a separate WC. The WC was installed in the 1850s and features original cupboards and water pump housing, while the shower is lined with coloured specimen marbles and 19th-century tiles.
The uppermost floor has three bedrooms, a home office and a generously sized bathroom. The office space was once a modest kitchen when the house was used as divided dwellings in the mid-19th century, and a working fluted stoneware sink remains. The west bedroom remains panelled with a cupboard in one alcove containing the original dry closet, a precursor to the WC. The bathroom has aged lime plaster on the walls, with a reddish aged wash applied. A hob grate is set into the fireplace, and two cast-iron roll-top claw foot baths are positioned by the high-set windows. Both are reclaimed, and one has a shower attachment to the tap fittings. This room is a wonderful space to relax in the evenings, a deux.
Guest Access:
Guests will have sole access to the entirety of the home.
The Neighborhood:
Stepney Green and nearby Whitechapel are an incredibly vibrant and centrally located part of east London. A short walk or cycle from both the River Thames and the City, the area offers excellent local amenities. The historic buildings on nearby Whitechapel Road have been extensively and sensitively restored in recent years in consultation with Historic England, presenting a multifarious union of the finest late 19th-century commercial architecture. The original Royal London Hospital building and its façade are being restored for use as the Tower Hamlets new town hall. They complete the full architectural restoration of the area. The green open spaces of Mile End Park, Limehouse Basin, Victoria Park (which provides access to the Regent’s Canal), Stepney Green Park and Stepney City Farm and Cafe are also a short walk away.
The eclectic George Tavern is recommended for drinks and occasional music events on Jubilee Street, while the Whitechapel Gallery and independent Genesis cinema provide cultural distractions. Nearby Spitalfields and Shoreditch offer further opportunities for dining, entertainment and shopping, with restaurants including Ottolenghi, Cecconi’s and St. John Bread & Wine. Spitalfields Market and the surrounding streets now offer shopping opportunities comparable to the West End, and the famous Brick Lane is just a short walk round the corner. Just down the road you will find Genesis cinema - a family owned & independent cinema continuing the tradition of entertaining East London since 1848.
Getting Around:
Transport links are excellent; a 10-minute walk away is Whitechapel underground station, which runs Circle and Hammersmith & City Line services and provides access to the East London branch of the Overground. A one-minute walk away and nearest to Malplaquet House, however, is Stepney Green station, which also runs both District and Hammersmith & City line services. The Elizabeth Line has recently opened and operates from Whitechapel underground station, from which trains run to Paddington station in 14 minutes and Heathrow Airport in 38 minutes. The house also lies immediately upon Cycle Superhighway II, a separate cycle lane directly connecting the City of London to the west and Stratford to the east.
Other Things to Note:
The current Wifi is provided by two dongle routers and given the size of the house the signal may be inconsistent in areas of the house - we are sourcing a permanent solution in the meantime.
The home is very unique in terms of design and function so we suggest anyone looking to book to look at all the photos before doing so as they are a fair reflection of the home and we acknowledge it may not be to everyone's taste.
No open fires
Dogs only
Strictly no parties
Unfortunately we do not allow under 12s
We partner with TRUVI to carry out secure guest ID verification, helping to ensure a safe and trusted stay for all parties. Once you have completed verification with TRUVI, your stay will be protected by Guest Guarantee and you'll benefit from an accidental damage cover.
Interaction with Guests:
We will be on hand throughout your stay to make it as enjoyable as possible for you :) You will be greeted on the day by a member of staff who will show you around!
住宿服务设施
互联网
- 独立别墅提供:Wi-Fi
厨房
- 冰箱
- 炊具、餐具和厨具
- 咖啡壶/茶具
- 烤面包机
- 烤箱
- 炉灶台
- 微波炉
用餐
- 餐桌
卧室
- 5 间卧室
- 提供床单
浴室
- 2 间浴室
- 吹风机
- 淋浴
- 提供毛巾
起居区
- 壁炉
- 餐桌
娱乐
- 电视
室外区域
- 花园
- 阳台
洗衣房
- 洗衣机
- 洗衣设施
工作区
- 办公间
- 办公桌
舒适
- 暖气
宠物
- 可接待宠物
适用性/无障碍设施
- 无烟住宿
服务和便利设施
- 熨斗/熨衣板
地段亮点
- 邻近动物园
休闲活动
- 邻近娱乐场
安全功能
- 一氧化碳检测器(房东注明住宿有一氧化碳检测器)
- 烟雾检测器(房东注明住宿有烟雾检测器)
概况
- 单元面积:372 平方米
- 花园
- 住宿不接待儿童入住
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Seven-bedroom beautiful home in the heart of London (Westminster)
Seven-bedroom beautiful home in the heart of London (Westminster)
伦敦市中心
- 厨房
- 洗衣机
- 干衣机
- 免费 WiFi
10.0 分,总分 10,绝佳,153 条点评
10
绝佳
153 条点评