Woodland House | |
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Woodland House
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Location | Holland Park, West London, England |
Coordinates | 51°29′59.51″N 0°12′10.02″W / 51.4998639°N 0.2027833°WCoordinates: 51°29′59.51″N 0°12′10.02″W / 51.4998639°N 0.2027833°W |
Built | 1876–77 |
Architect | Richard Norman Shaw |
Architectural style(s) | Queen Anne style |
Governing body | As of 2013, leasehold privately owned, freehold owned by the Ilchester Estate |
Listed Building – Grade II*
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Official name: Woodland House | |
Designated | 29 July 1949 |
Reference no. | 1188804 |
Woodland House is a large detached house at 31 Melbury Road (originally 11 Melbury Road), in the Holland Park district of Kensington and Chelsea, W14. Built from 1875-7 in the Queen Anne style by the architect Richard Norman Shaw, it is a Grade II* listed building. Commissioned by the painter Luke Fildes, Woodland House is situated next to William Burges' Grade I listed Tower House.
Originally 11 Melbury Road, the house was renumbered as 31 Melbury Road in 1967. It was the second of two houses in Melbury Road designed by Shaw, the first, 8 Melbury Road, was designed for another painter Marcus Stone. Fildes and Stone were artistic rivals and each naturally regarded their own Shaw-designed house as superior. Of the construction of Woodland House Fildes wrote in November 1876 that "The house is getting on famously and looks stunning ... It is a long way the most superior house of the whole lot; I consider it knocks Stone's to fits, though of course he wouldn't have that by what I hear he says of his, but my opinion is the universal one." Fildes moved into the house in October 1877 and it remained his home until his death there in February 1927. Fildes was survived by his wife and six children. In 1959 the London County Council commemorated Fildes at Woodland House with a blue plaque.
Woodlands House was later the home of the film director Michael Winner. His father purchased the lease for the property after the Second World War and, buying the outstanding lease from his father in 1972, Winner lived at the house until his own death at the house,in 2013. It was subsequently purchased by the pop star Robbie Williams.