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Ismaili Centre, London

The Ismaili Centre, London
View of the Ismaili Centre, London from Exhibition Road.
View of the Ismaili Centre, London from Exhibition Road, with the Victoria and Albert Museum visible in the background.
Basic information
Location Cromwell Gardens, South Kensington, London, UK
Geographic coordinates 51°29′44″N 0°10′23″W / 51.4955°N 0.1731°W / 51.4955; -0.1731Coordinates: 51°29′44″N 0°10′23″W / 51.4955°N 0.1731°W / 51.4955; -0.1731
Affiliation Nizari Ismaili Muslim
Leadership His Highness the Aga Khan
Website http://www.theismaili.org/ismailicentre/london
Architectural description
Architect(s) Casson Conder Partnership
Architectural type Jamatkhana
Groundbreaking 6 September 1979
Completed 1985

The Ismaili Centre, London is one of six such centres world-wide. Established in South Kensington more than thirty years ago, it is a religious, social and cultural meeting place for the Ismaili Muslim community in the United Kingdom and is the first such centre to be specially designed and built for Ismailis in the Western world.

The Ismaili Centre, London was inaugurated on 24 April 1985 by then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, in the presence of His Highness the Aga Khan, the 49th Imam (spiritual leader) of the Ismaili Muslims. It was the first religious, cultural and social space specifically designed for the Ismaili community in the Western world.

The Ismaili community had been in the United Kingdom since as early as 1951, when they established a religious, cultural and social centre at Kensington Court. It was moved to Palace Gate in 1957, but the needs of the growing community increased over time, and a site at Cromwell Gardens was acquired in the 1970s.

Lord Soames, the then Lord President of the Council, laid the foundation stone of the new Centre on 6 September 1979, in the presence of the Aga Khan. Construction began in July 1980.

Cromwell Gardens in London's South Kensington district where the Ismaili Centre is situated is a prominent location with a storied past. Immediately to the north on the opposite side of Cromwell Gardens is the Victoria and Albert Museum. To the south is Thurloe Place and to the west is Exhibition Road. The nearest tube station is South Kensington, close by to the south-west. It is linked by an underground passage that extends further north to the South Kensington museums.

The site had previously been owned by the Shakespeare Memorial National Theatre Committee, who in 1937 intended to construct a National Theatre on the site. But the outbreak of the Second World War and a later realisation that the site was too small for their ambitions, scuttled their plans.


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