It is named after Earl Cadogan and runs parallel to the lower half of Sloane Street.
[2] Cadogan Place is considered part of Prime Central London, an area of high property values that are popular with foreign buyers, particularly from the Middle East and China.
The eastern side of Cadogan Place is defined by its long stuccoed terraces built in the early 19th century.
[10] Charles Dickens wrote of Cadogan Place in his 1839 novel Nicholas Nickleby that it was a "slight bond" between the "aristocratic pavements" of Belgrave Square and the "barbarism" of Chelsea and the residents had the "airs and semblances of loftiest rank" while possessing "the realities of middle station".
[2][12] Cadogan Place is the home of Fanny and Robert Assingham in Henry James's late novel The Golden Bowl.