Montpelier Square

From a point in Plantagenet England until 1955, Kensington's eastern spur was thinner, amounting to Brompton (a forlorn term for a wedge of Knightsbridge to the south).

[3] Grade II listing of 44 Montpelier Street, one of two southern approach ways, means that all houses within two-house-fronts of directly facing the square plus those – all classical houses, whether internally converted to flats – facing it are listed buildings.

Average full houses, on long leases, of the square cost £8.2 million in 2018.

[12] In 2007 the Evening Standard saw the square a strong 'street of success' where 'the capital's corporate power brokers choose to make their homes'.

The square ranked equally, 36th, as to declared housing of directors of companies with a turnover of more than £10 million.

Many of the houses along the northern side of the square and the face of one of an adjoining street