A rare one-bedroom garden apartment in a period building on this celebrated Bloomsbury street. Large private landscaped garden. Opposite The Brunswick. Russell Square tube under one minute.
Property Details
Council Tax: C
Tenure: Leasehold
Ground Rent: £250.00
Ground Rent Review Period: ASK AGENT
Annual Service Charge: £600.00
Length of Lease: 91 years
- Large private landscaped garden
- One double bedroom
- Period building, attractive faade
- Lower ground floor position
- Village street character
- Opposite The Brunswick Centre
- Russell Square tube under 1 min
An exceptionally attractive one-bedroom garden apartment set within a handsome period building on one of central London's most beloved residential streets. Occupying the lower ground floor, the property enjoys a remarkably generous and beautifully landscaped private outside space — a true rarity in the heart of Zone 1 — offering a sense of seclusion and tranquillity that belies the address.
The apartment has been thoughtfully arranged to make the most of its garden orientation, with the principal rooms benefiting from natural light and direct access to the outside space. The large landscaped garden — a feature that sets this home apart from the vast majority of central London apartments — provides both a private retreat and an enviable setting for entertaining. Period details characteristic of the building's architecture have been sympathetically retained throughout, lending the home a warmth and character rarely found in new-build equivalents.
Marchmont Street is one of central London's most characterful addresses — a lively yet unhurried high street connecting Russell Square to Tavistock Place, and lying at the very heart of the storied Bloomsbury district. The western side of the street (including numbers 39–73) is largely Grade II listed, and the street has been built since the early nineteenth century, contributing to the architectural coherence and handsome scale that make it so distinctive.
Directly opposite the property stands The Brunswick — the landmark Grade II listed mixed-use complex designed by Patrick Hodgkinson and completed in 1972. Now a vibrant destination in its own right, it houses a full-size Waitrose supermarket, the acclaimed Curzon Bloomsbury art-house cinema, a range of independent restaurants and cafés including The Riding House Café and Hare & Tortoise, alongside pharmacies and specialist retailers. Often described as "Bloomsbury's high street," it draws some seven million visitors annually and is a defining feature of the neighbourhood's daily life.
Bloomsbury carries an extraordinary cultural and intellectual heritage. The area is home to University College London, whose buildings and academic life permeate the surrounding streets, as well as the British Museum, the Foundling Museum. Russell Square, Brunswick Square, and the beautifully tended St George's Gardens all lie within a short stroll.
Russell Square station on the Piccadilly line places the West End, Heathrow, and the City all within effortless reach. King's Cross St. Pancras — offering the Elizabeth line, Eurostar, and six further Underground lines — is reachable on foot in under ten minutes, making this one of the best-connected residential positions in London.