Property Description
Logan Mews is a cobbled through road off Logan Place in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. Logan Mews contains 13 properties, used for residential purposes.
During World War II, the Aggregate Night Time Bomb Census recorded a high explosive bomb falling onto Warwick Gardens, west of the Mews. In the past, the area was noted as having comfortable living conditions and ordinary household earnings for the time when the London Poverty Maps were first published.
The Mews is part of Kensington’s Edwardes Square, Scarsdale and Abingdon Conservation Area which was first designated in January 1970 and extended in 1970 to cover part of Adam and Eve Mews (complete cover in 1981). The small-scale back streets contrast pleasantly with the major terraces. The area contains a fair number of Mews and individual studios off Stratford Road.
The two storey properties have rendered or painted brickwork facades with flat roof styles, surrounded by a cobbled road surface and partial raised pavements. Some of the properties have roof gardens and there are a lot of plants present.
Everchanging Nature
Originally used as the coach house/ stable accommodation for the main houses on Logan Place, the primary purpose of the Mews properties is now a mixture of residential and commercial.
Before and since 2003 there have been a few planning applications made for alterations to the properties in Logan Mews; most notably, basement excavations.
Conservation Area controls now apply to new development in the Mews.