Mansfield Street, London

It runs roughly north to south from New Cavendish Street to Queen Anne Street.

About halfway, there are t-junctions with Duchess Street, off to the east, and Mansfield Mews, off to the west.

5-13 and 16–22 are all grade II* listed.

[1][2] They were designed by Robert and James Adam, and built in 1770–75.

13 was the home of the architect John Loughborough Pearson, and the home and office of architect Sir Edwin Lutyens, from 1919 to his death in 1944.

13 Mansfield Street in 2015, home to architects John Loughborough Pearson , and Sir Edwin Lutyens