
Located on the second storey of a townhouse within Ramsgate’s Grade II-listed Wellington Crescent, this one-bedroom apartment has breathtaking views over the English Channel. Its interior spaces have been sensitively renovated by the apartment’s current owners, who have implemented a number of subtle interventions that enhance the home’s Regency bones. Ramsgate’s train station is a short walk away and runs services to London in under 75 minutes, making this both a brilliant bolthole or a soothing year-round retreat.
Setting the Scene
Ramsgate developed into the town it is today following the completion of its harbour in around 1850. This bolstered its reputation as a popular seaside resort, with a plethora of hotels and restaurants and a long promenade. Ramsgate’s resort status was also helped by early royal patronage, Princess Victoria having favoured the historic Albion House hotel. Of the town, Vincent Van Gogh – who lived in Ramsgate in 1876 – said that: “This town has something very singular, one notices the sea in everything.”
Built between 1817 and 1824, Wellington Crescent received Grade II-listed status for its Regency era construction and was noted in Collard and Hurst’s 1822 map of Ramsgate. Its part-rendered, part-stock-brick frontage is characterised by a Doric colonnade and tall windows. A slate roof crowns the building, and ironwork railings add ornate visual detailing. Inside, the house retains its sweeping period proportions that, particularly in the south-east-facing living room, are filled with an ethereal coastal light.
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