
An exacting renovation has reappointed this two-bedroom, first-floor apartment in Kensal Rise with a colourful, confident palette. Unfolding over just shy of 800 sq ft, the home retains many of its period features, which have been carefully stripped back to their original materials. Bathurst Gardens is brilliantly located for the best of the area and is just a 5-minute walk from Kensal Green Station.
Setting the Scene
Bathurst Gardens sits just off All Souls Avenue in the heart of Kensal Rise. The street is named after All Souls College, Oxford, which owned land in the area. In 1888, following the surrender of a farm lease, All Souls began development; they constructed Chamberlayne Road, which linked Kensal with Willesden Green. This newly developed area was named Kensal Rise, and in 1890, Kensal Green Station was renamed Kensal Rise Station; the newer Kensal Green Station in use today was built in 1916.
The All Souls estate now extends from Kensal Green to Harlesden. Many of the houses were built by Charles Langler and Charles Pinkham, their most notable work being the intricately decorated houses in Clifford Gardens, constructed around 1897. Each of the streets has a wonderfully unique character; Bathurst Gardens is made up of handsome, late Victorian red-brick houses with large bay windows and cheery tiled porches.
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