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==Parks and nature reserves==
==Parks and nature reserves==
The Suburb has large areas of open space, including [[Hampstead Heath Extension]]; [[Big Wood and Little Wood]] and the private [[Turner's Wood]]. The southern end is close to [[Golders Hill Park]].
The Suburb has large areas of open space, including [[Hampstead Heath Extension]]; [[Big Wood and Little Wood]] and the private [[Turner's Wood]]. The southern end is close to [[Golders Hill Park]].

==Notable residents==
===Present===
*[[Theo Adams]] – Performance Artist
*[[Martin Bell]] – BBC war reporter, independent MP & British [[UNICEF]] Ambassador
*[[Victor Blank|Sir Victor Blank]] – Finance (Lloyds TSB)
*[[Katie Boyle]] – TV presenter
*[[Jason Connery]] – Actor
*[[Greg Davies]] – Comedian & Actor
*[[Richard and Judy|Richard Madeley & Judy Finnigan]] – TV presenters<ref>{{cite web|last=Ward |first=Victoria |url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/9839154/Lord-Justice-Leveson-and-Richard-Madeley-fight-planning-application-for-underground-pool.html |title=Lord Justice Leveson and Richard Madeley fight planning application for underground pool |publisher=Telegraph |date=31 January 2013}}</ref>
*[[Sir Brian Leveson]] – Lord Justice of Appeal ([[Leveson Inquiry|Press ethics inquiry]])
*[[Paul McGuigan (musician)|Paul McGuigan]] – Rock musician with ''[[Oasis (band)|Oasis]]''
*[[David Matthews (composer)|David Matthews]] – Composer
*[[Michael Ridpath]] – Author
*[[Claudia Roden]] – Cookbook writer & cultural Anthropologist
*[[Jonathan Ross (television presenter)|Jonathan Ross]] – TV & Radio presenter
*[[Marc Sinden]] – Film Director, Actor & Theatre Producer
*[[Harry Styles]] – Pop singer with ''[[One Direction]]''
*[[Robert Winston|Lord Winston]] – Professor, Surgeon, Scientist & TV presenter
*[[Gok Wan]] – Guru stylist & TV presenter

===Past===
*[[Edgar Anstey]] – Documentary filmmaker and [[Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature|Oscar]] winner (lived at 6, Hurst Close)
*[[Saif al-Islam]] – Second son of late Libyan leader [[Muammar Gaddafi]]
*[[Ove Arup|Sir Ove Arup]] – Architectural structural engineer and founder of the engineering firm [[Arup Group Limited|Arup]] (lived at 28, Willifield Way) [[Blue Plaque]]
*[[Henrietta Barnett|Dame Henrietta Barnett]] – Social reformer, founder of [[Toynbee Hall]], [[Whitechapel Art Gallery]] and creator of Hampstead Garden Suburb (lived at 1, South Square) [[Blue Plaque]]
*[[Stanley Black]] – Bandleader and Composer (lived at 8, Linell Close)
*[[Warwick Braithwaite]] – Opera Conductor (lived at 23, Linden Lea)
*[[Angela Buxton]] – Tennis player and winner of the 1956 women's doubles title at the French Championships and Wimbledon (lived in a flat above the shops in Market Place and later at 16, Winnington Road)
*[[John Chapman (English writer)|John Chapman]] – Playwright of several noted [[farces]] (lived at 48, Wildwood Road)
*[[Charlie Chester]] – Comedian (lived at 94, Erskine Hill & 5, Vivian Way)
*[[Charles Clarke]] – Labour Party MP & Home Secretary (lived at 3, Meadway Close)
*[[Eric Coates]] – Composer (lived at 7, Willifield Way) [[Blue Plaque]]
*[[Sacha Baron Cohen]] – Comedian, Writer and Actor
*[[Constantine II of Greece|Constantine]] – the last King of Greece
*[[Daniel Craig]] – Actor
*[[Sir Robin Day]] – Television & Radio journalist and interviewer (lived at 84, Oakwood Road)
*[[George Devine]] – Theatre Manager, Director and Actor, founder of the [[Young Vic Theatre]] (lived at Lucas Square, 64, Hampstead Way)
*[[Robert Donat]] – Actor (lived at 8, Meadway) [[Blue Plaque]]
*[[Clive Dunn]] – Actor
*[[Noel Edmonds]] – Broadcaster (lived in Brookland Hill)
*[[Vanessa Feltz]] – Personality (lived in Winnington Road)
*[[Darrell Figgis]] – Irish writer, [[Sinn Féin]] activist and independent parliamentarian in the [[Irish Free State]]
*[[Michael Flanders]] – Actor, Singer and lyric-writer, one half of ''[[Flanders and Swann]]'' (lived at 1, Brunner Close)
*[[Mark Fleischmann]] - Actor
*[[Martin Freeman]] – Actor
*[[Martin Furnival Jones]] – Director General of [[MI5]] from 1965 until 1972 (lived at 53, Temple Fortune Hill)
*[[John Gale (theatre producer)|John Gale]] – Theatre producer and Artistic Director of [[Chichester Festival Theatre]] (lived at 57, Northway)
*[[Antony Gormley]] – Sculptor (lived in Wildwood Road)
*[[Tony Hancock]] – Comedian and Actor (lived at 10, Grey Close) [[Blue Plaque]]
*[[Myra Hess|Dame Myra Hess]] – Concert Pianist (lived at 48, Wildwood Road) [[Blue Plaque]]
*[[Gerard Hoffnung]] – Musician, Humorist, Caricaturist and Broadcaster (lived at 5, Thornton Way)
*[[Trevor Huddleston|Archbishop Trevor Huddleston]] – Anti-apartheid campaigner (lived at 53, Hampstead Way)
*[[Bruce Kent]] – [[CND]] campaigner (lived at 73, Meadway)
*[[William Lewis (journalist)|William Lewis]] – ''[[Daily Telegraph]]'' Editor (lived in Northway)
*[[Cyril Luckham]] – Actor (lived at 70, Hampstead Way)
*[[Peter Mandelson]] – Labour Party MP & Cabinet Minister (lived at 12, Bigwood Road)
*[[David McCallum]] – Actor (lived at 1, Erskine Hill)
*[[Lord Longford]] & [[Elizabeth Pakenham|Lady Elizabeth Pakenham]] & [[Antonia Fraser|Lady Antonia Fraser]] – Historian & Biographer; Campaigner; Author (lived at 10, Linnell Drive)
*[[Heather Mills]] – Charity campaigner and former model (lived in Allingham Court, The Bishops Avenue)<ref name="ShowbizSpy">{{cite web |url=http://realestalker.blogspot.co.uk/2009/09/heather-mills-is-flipping-out-on.html |title=Heather Mills flips her Bishops Avenue appt|publisher=Real Estate Talker |accessdate=25 September 2009}}</ref>
*[[Cecil Parker]] – Actor (lived at 17, Litchfield Way)
*[[Frank Pick]] – Transport administrator (lived at 15, Wildwood Road)
*[[Sir Ralph Richardson]] – Actor (lived at Bedegars Lee, Kenwood Close) [[Blue Plaque]]
*[[Paul Robeson]] – American Actor and Singer (lived in Wildwood Road)
*[[Paul Scott (novelist)|Paul Scott]] – Novelist, Playwright and Poet (lived at 61, Brookland Rise & 78, Addison Way)
*[[Vikram Seth]] – Poet and Novelist (lived at 133, Willifield Way)
*[[Will Self]] – Author and Journalist (lived at 33, Brim Hill)
*[[Dinah Sheridan]] – Actress
*[[Emanuel Shinwell]] – Labour Party MP & Secretary of State for War (lived at 33, Erskine Hill)
*[[Alastair Sim]] – Actor (lived at 13, Wildwood Road)
*[[Donald Sinden|Sir Donald Sinden]] – Actor (lived at 60, Temple Fortune Lane)
*[[Lord Soper]] – Methodist minister, socialist, pacifist and President of the [[League Against Cruel Sports]] (lived at 6, Willifield Way & 17, Bigwood Road)
*[[Jerry Springer]] – American television presenter (born & lived at Belvedere Court, Lyttelton Road)
*[[Ringo Starr]] – Drummer for ''[[The Beatles]]'' and Actor (lived in Kenwood Close)
*[[Nigel Stock (actor)|Nigel Stock]] – Actor (lived at 21, Heathgate)
*[[Thomas S. Tait]] – Modernist Architect (lived at Gates House, Wyldes Close) [[Blue Plaque]]
*[[Elizabeth Taylor|Dame Elizabeth Taylor]] – Actress (lived at 8, Wildwood Road)
*[[Dimitri Tiomkin]] – Film-score Composer and four-time [[Academy Award for Best Original Score|Oscar]] winner (lived in Hampstead Lane)
*[[Raymond Unwin|Sir Raymond Unwin]] – Engineer, Architect and Town Planner, chief planner of Hampstead Garden Suburb (lived at Wyldes, Hampstead Way) [[Blue Plaque]]
*[[Anton Walbrook]] – Actor (lived at 36, Holne Chase)
*[[Hugh Walpole|Sir Hugh Walpole]] Author (lived in Turner Drive and at 19, Thornton Way)
*[[Gwen Watford]] & [[Richard Bebb]] – Actress; Actor & noted collector of early sound recordings (lived at 22, Temple Fortune Lane)
*[[Evelyn Waugh]] – Author (lived at 145, North End Road)
*[[Rachel Weisz]] – Actress (lived at 6, Linnell Close)
*[[Rebecca West]] – Author, Journalist, Literary critic and Travel writer (lived at 5, Chatham Close)
*[[Harold Wilson]] – Labour Party MP & twice Prime Minister (lived at 10 & 12, Southway) [[Blue Plaque]]
*[[Donald Wolfit|Sir Donald Wolfit]] – Actor (lived in Hampstead Way)

==See also==
*[[The Bishops Avenue]]
*[[Ebenezer Howard]]
*[[Garden city movement]]
*[[Garden real estate]]
*[[Brentham Garden Suburb]]
*[[List of people from Barnet]]

==References==
{{Reflist}}

==External links==
{{commons category-inline|Hampstead Garden Suburb}}
*[http://www.hgs.org.uk/index.html HGS website]
*[http://www.hgstrust.org/about/index.html]
*[http://centenary.hgs.org.uk/downloads/famouspeople.pdf Famous residents]
*''Hampstead Garden Suburb Notable Residents and where they lived'' compiled by Dr Eva Jacobs. Published by Hampstead Garden Suburb Trust. ISBN 978-0-9516742-9-1

{{LB Barnet}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2013}}
[[Category:Areas of London]]
[[Category:Districts of Barnet]]
[[Category:Garden suburbs]]
[[Category:Edwardian era]]
[[Category:Works of Edwin Lutyens]]

Revision as of 19:30, 6 October 2014

Hampstead Garden Suburb
OS grid referenceTQ265885
London borough
Ceremonial countyGreater London
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLONDON
Postcode districtN2
Postcode districtNW11
Dialling code020
PoliceMetropolitan
FireLondon
AmbulanceLondon
UK Parliament
London Assembly
List of places
UK
England
London

Hampstead Garden Suburb is a suburb, north of Hampstead, west of Highgate and east of Golders Green. It is an example of early twentieth-century domestic architecture and town planning located in the London Borough of Barnet in northwest London. The master plan was prepared by Barry Parker and Sir Raymond Unwin.

Despite the founders' original intentions, Hampstead Garden Suburb is now considered to be one of the wealthiest areas in the country.[1]

History

Hampstead Garden Suburb was founded by Henrietta Barnett, who, with her husband Samuel, had started the Whitechapel Art Gallery and Toynbee Hall. In 1906, Barnett set up the Hampstead Garden Suburb Trust Ltd, which purchased 243 acres of land from Eton College for the scheme and appointed Raymond Unwin as its architect.[2]

Among the scheme's aims were the following:

  • It should cater for all classes of people and all income groups
  • There should be a low housing density
  • Roads should be wide and tree-lined
  • Houses should be separated by hedges, not walls
  • Woods and public gardens should be free to all
  • It should be quiet, with no church bells

This required a private bill before Parliament, as it was counter to local bylaws. The provisions of the new act allowed less land to be taken up by roads and more by gardens and open spaces.[2]

The ideas for the "Garden Suburb" were clearly based on the ideas and experience of Parker and Unwin in the planning and development of Letchworth Garden City, the first development of its kind, inspired by the work of Ebenezer Howard. Other consultant architects involved with the Hampstead development include George Lister Sutcliffe and John Soutar.

However, with no industry, no public houses and few shops or services, the suburb, unlike the garden cities, made no attempt to be self-contained.[2] In the 1930s the "Suburb" (as it is known by locals) expanded to the north of the A1. While more characterful than most other suburban housing, some of the housing to the north is considered, overall, of less architectural value.

On Central Square, laid out by Sir Edwin Lutyens, there are two large churches, St. Jude's Church and The Free Church, as well as a Quaker Meeting House. There are two mixed state primary schools in the Suburb, Garden Suburb and Brookland. There is also a state girls' grammar school, Henrietta Barnett School. The school used to house The Institute, an adult education centre, but most of The Institute has now moved to accommodation in East Finchley, opposite the tube station, with the opening of a new purpose-built arts centre.

Shops and other services are provided in the shopping parades of Market Place and Temple Fortune, with Golders Green and East Finchley within walking distance for those who live at either end.

Little Wood contains an open air arena, which is used for summer theatrical performances by a local amateur theatre society.

Despite the founders' intentions, the steep increases in house prices across London combined with the continual expansion of the Greater London area and the very small proportion of housing association housing means that Hampstead Garden Suburb is now considered to be one of the wealthiest areas in the country.[1]

Hampstead Garden Suburb Trust

Freehold houses, flats and commercial premises within the Suburb are subject to a scheme of management approved pursuant to the Leasehold Reform Act 1967 by an Order of the Chancery Division of the High Court, dated 17 January 1974, as amended by a further Order dated 17 February 1983.

The HGS Trust whose aim is to protect the character and amenity of the Suburb[3] operates the scheme from an office in Finchley Road. Freeholders are required to get the prior approval of the Trust before altering the external appearance of their properties. Consent is also required for significant changes to gardens, erection of garden sheds and felling or pruning of trees.[4] The Trust is also the freeholder of the majority of the remaining leasehold property in the Suburb which are mostly held on very long leases.

Geography

Parks and nature reserves

The Suburb has large areas of open space, including Hampstead Heath Extension; Big Wood and Little Wood and the private Turner's Wood. The southern end is close to Golders Hill Park.

  1. ^ a b [1][dead link]
  2. ^ a b c Gayler, Hih J. (1996). Geographical excursions in London. University Press of America,. p. 176. ISBN 0-7618-0328-9. Retrieved 24 August 2011.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  3. ^ "Hampstead Garden Suburb Trust". Hgstrust.org.
  4. ^ "Hampstead Garden Suburb Trust". Hgstrust.org. 6 January 2012.