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Essential
Architecture- London Apsley
House Number One, London |
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architect
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Benjamin Dean Wyatt |
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location
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stands alone at Hyde Park Corner, on the
south-east corner of Hyde Park, facing south towards the busy traffic
circulation system |
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date
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1818 |
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style
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Regency |
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construction
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golden Bath stone |
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type
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English aristocratic town
House |
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Apsley House, as it is today, Hyde Park
Corner, London. |
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Apsley House in 1829 by TH Shepherd. The
main gateway to Hyde Park can be glimpsed on the left. |
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Apsley House on an 1869 Ordnance Survey
map, showing its position at the end of a terrace. The neighbouring houses
were demolished in the post World War II period to allow Park Lane to be
widened. The Wellington Arch has been moved since this time.
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The Waterloo Gallery at Apsley House by
Joseph Nash, 1852. |
Apsley House, also known as Number One, London, was the London residence
of the Dukes of Wellington and stands alone at Hyde Park Corner, on the
south-east corner of Hyde Park, facing south towards the busy traffic
circulation system.
The house is now run by English Heritage and is open as a museum
and art gallery, although the current Dukes of Wellington still use part
of the building as a part-time residence. It is sometimes referred to as
the Wellington Museum. It is perhaps the only preserved example of an
English aristocratic town house from its period. The practice has been
to maintain the rooms as far as possible in the original style and
decor. It contains the 1st Duke's collection of paintings by Goya,
Velasquez, Rubens and Brueghel among others, porcelain, the silver
centrepiece made for the Duke in Portugal, c 1815, sculpture and
furniture. Antonio Canova's heroic nude Napoleon holding a gilded Nike
in the palm of his hand, made 1802-10 and set up for a time in the
Louvre, was bought by the Government for Wellington in 1816 (Pevsner)
and stands in Adam's Stairwell.
History
The house was originally built in red brick by Robert
Adam between 1771 and 1778 for Lord Apsley, the Lord Chancellor, who
gave the house its name. Some Adam interiors survive: the semi-circular
Staircase, the Drawing Room with its apsidal end, and the Portico Room,
behind the giant Corinthian portico added by Wellington.
In 1807 the house was purchased by Richard Wellesley, 1st
Marquess Wellesley, the elder brother of Sir Arthur Wellesley, but in
1817 financial difficulties forced him to sell it to his famous brother,
by then the Duke of Wellington, who needed a London base from which to
pursue his new career in politics.
Wellington employed the architect Benjamin Dean Wyatt to carry
out renovations between 1818 and 1819. He extended the house by adding
two bays westward to the original five; built the Waterloo Gallery for
the Duke's paintings, and faced the red brick with the grander golden
Bath stone. He also introduced his own version of French style to the
interior, notable in the Waterloo Gallery and the florid wrought iron
stair-rail, "just turning from Empire to a neo-Rococo" (Pevsner).
The house was given the popular nickname of Number One, London,
since it was the first house passed by visitors who travelled from the
countryside after the toll gates at Knightsbridge. It was originally
part of a contiguous line of great houses on Piccadilly, demolished to
widen Park Lane: its official address remains 149 Piccadilly, W1J 7NT.
During the Second World War, it was rumoured that King George VI
and Queen Elizabeth heard that the treasures of the house hadn't been
evacuated. The story goes that they both arrived in a van and quickly
had the objects moved to Frogmore for safekeeping.
The 7th Duke gave the house to the nation in 1947, but the family
retains an apartment on the second floor (U.S. third floor). The house
is now managed by English Heritage and is open to the public.
References
Blaikie, Thomas, You look awfully like the Queen: Wit and Wisdom
from the House of Windsor. Harper Collins, 2002. ISBN 0007148747.
Jervis, Simon and Tomlin, Maurice (revised by Voak, Jonathon)
(1984, revisions 1989 & 1995) Apsley House Wellington Museum published
by the Trustees of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London ISBN
1851771611
Nikolaus Pevsner, The Buildings of England: London vol. I, p 463.
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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