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Lowndes Square is a residential at the north-west end of , , SW1. It is formed of archetypal grand of light stucco houses, cream or white. The length of the central rectangular garden is parallel with to the west; visible from the north-west corner is a corner of the store, beyond which is Knightsbridge tube station. Ecclesiastically (that is, in the Anglican Church), it remains in a northern projection of one of the parishes of Chelsea, except its east side, which is in the very small parish of St Paul, , a division which is mirrored secularly by the boundaries of two London Boroughs (Westminster and Kensington and Chelsea).


Ownership and building design
The square has the highest percentage of highly anonymous (shell company) ownership in the UK, accounting for 40% of the houses.

Its houses are valued in excess of £10 million and so are mainly internally converted into apartments, some of which are multi-level. Locally status for most of the buildings means the façades and exterior structure above ground must remain little changed. Nos. 11 and 12 have higher, main statutory-level protection.

As with , designed most of the houses. Lowndes Court, a classical apartment block, takes up the south side bar No. 34 (former Nos. 28–33); the north side (former No. 50 and possibly higher) is the Park Tower (Hotel), which fronts Knightsbridge, an arterial road on the other side.

The Pakistan High Commission takes up an interior conversion of Nos. 35–36.


Context and central garden
On the other side of Sloane Street are and , notable garden squares of London which are also designed by Basevi.

The private communal garden is and contains and shrubs.


In film, fiction and the media
This was a setting in the Edward Frederic Benson novel The Countess of Lowndes Square.

In Alan Hollinghurst's novel The Line of Beauty, the Ouradi family live on the square.

and 's 1970 film Performance, starring and , used interiors of 's Lowndes Square house.


Notable residents
  • (1892–1978), first president of Kenya
  • William Lowndes (1652–1724), politician
  • Lord Alan Spencer-Churchill (1825–1873), businessman and great-uncle of Winston Churchill
  • Lord Haliburton (1832–1907), civil servant, at No. 57.
  • Claude Bowes-Lyon, 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne (1855–1944), landowner and maternal grandfather of
  • Geoffrey Lubbock (1873–1932), High Sheriff of the County of London
  • H.D. (1886–1961), American poet
  • (1889–1981), radio entrepreneur and Conservative MP for Chatham (1935–1945)
  • Margaret Lowenfeld (1890–1973), child psychologist
  • (1896–1980), fascist party leader
  • Eric Lubbock, 4th Baron Avebury (1928–2016), Liberal politician
  • Garland Anderson (1933–2001), American composer
  • (born 1966), Russian tycoon
  • Alfred Mond, 1st Baron Melchett, Parliamentarian (first Liberal and then Conservative), and Violet Mond, Baroness Melchett, humanitarian, activist, and social hostess

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