James Street, Marylebone

On its western side it is joined by Gray's Yard in the north, which is a gated cul-de-sac with flats above, Picton Place and Barrett Street.

The proposal was opposed by both the occupants of Mandeville Place, who felt that they did not want to lose the higher class associations of the street in order to be associated with shopkeepers, and the shopkeepers and small traders of the other streets who worried about the cost of the change, possible customer confusion, and the association with Marylebone Road rather than the posher Oxford Street they were nearer.

[2][3] The street is mostly composed of terraced houses with small shops and restaurants on the ground floor and some larger buildings on the western side.

Number 56 on the east side is a grade II listed building with Historic England.

[1] Media related to James Street, Marylebone at Wikimedia Commons

The Lamb and Flag public house on the corner of James Street and Barrett Street
The immediate vicinity of James Street