Hyde Park Square is a residential, tree-planted, garden square one block north of Hyde Park fronted by classical buildings, many of which are listed and marks a crossover of Lancaster Gate and Connaught Village neighbourhoods of Bayswater, London. It measures (internally) 200 by 500 feet, of which the bulk is the private communal garden – the rest is street-lit, pavemented streets with low railings in front of the houses. Connaught Street runs eastwards from the square towards the Edgware Road.
The square was part of "Tyburnia"[1] planned in 1827 by Samuel Pepys Cockerell for the then semi-rural prime holding of the diocese controlled by the Bishop of London but was laid out to a modified plan by his successor George Gutch.
Aside from an approach street or road at its four corners it marks the end of:
Numbering runs in one set for each side, anticlockwise, from south-east:
The square measures, internally, 200 feet (61 m) by 500 feet (150 m), of which the bulk is the private communal garden – the rest is street-lit, pavemented streets with low railings in front of the houses.
№s 11–20A and 21 on the north side are grade II listed buildings, thus statutorily protected.[2] №s 30–37 (the west of the south side) is too, likewise, built around 1830–40, probably by George Ledwell Taylor.[3]