£6,000,000
(£1,661/sq. ft)
6 bed end terrace house for saleKingswood Avenue, Queen's Park, London NW6
6 beds
4 baths
2 receptions
3,613 sq. ft
EPC Rating: D
About this property
The largest footprint on Kingswood Avenue, directly facing thirty acres of Queen's Park with uninterrupted views
Six bedrooms across three floors, including a principal suite overlooking the park
Exceptional period detail throughout: Paneled ceilings, cornice, marble fireplaces, herringbone parquet, original staircase and beamed study
Mature private rear garden with fig tree, Japanese maple and brick-built garage with gated off-street parking for two cars
Moments from Queen's Park station (Bakerloo line and London Overground) and Paddington's Elizabeth line connection
One recorded sale in over a century; thirty years of single ownership
Introduction
Queen's Park opened in 1887; thirty acres of public green space laid out by Alexander McKenzie for Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee. The surrounding streets were developed between 1895 and 1905 by Solomon Barnett, with Kingswood Avenue conceived as the most substantial addresses in the emerging estate. They remain so today.
Now imagine the largest footprint on that road: An end-of-terrace Edwardian house of considerable scale, set directly opposite the park with uninterrupted views across its full thirty acres.
That property could be yours. It has been in the same ownership for thirty years, with one recorded sale in over a century.
The Property
The red-brick façade, dressed in purple-blushing wisteria, announced by a perfectly preserved terrazzo pathway, carries the authority of its era. What lies beyond has been lovingly shaped over that same extended period of single ownership, and it shows in every detail.
At ground level, the house unfolds with generosity and intention. The sitting room, with its paneled ceilings, marble fireplace and iron hearth, sweeping blond parquet, and a bay window observing the park, is a room made equally for entertaining and for quieter acts of family life. The formal dining room adjacent, with its original marble fireplace and continued herringbone parquet, is poised for the kind of dinner that lingers long after the table is cleared.
At the rear, the kitchen and breakfast room extends into a morning room beneath a glazed roof, opening directly onto the garden. It is a space designed for those unhurried mornings, quietly reflecting over a deep-roast coffee as the light moves in.
The rear garden has evolved over decades into something genuinely beautiful. A broad flagstone path gives structure to sun-dappled lawns; a fig tree anchors the rear façade, alongside a mature Japanese maple, Italian cypress and lilac. It leads to a gated drive and a brick-built, tile-roofed garage with space for two cars.
Upstairs, connected by the original staircase, the principal bedroom observes the park from three large original sash windows. It is especially wonderful to idle here, watching as the sun pans slowly across the room over the course of a day. Three further double bedrooms sit alongside, two with en suite, and one presently configured as an oversized study of tremendous character, with a vaulted ceiling, jutting beams, and a picture window onto the garden. On the highest level, the owners have curated a further two double bedrooms: Bright, private, removed.
Location
Queen's Park itself needs little introduction. Designed without straight paths, it makes extensive use of bold tree planting and shrubberies, with open areas of lawn for recreation and sport, including tennis courts, pitch and putt, a children's farm, ornamental quiet garden and the beloved 1887 bandstand.
The neighbourhood that has gathered around it has become one of London's most compelling. Local hotspots Carmel, Don't Tell Dad, Michiko Sushino, Yard Sale Pizza and sudu define the dining scene. Every Sunday on Salusbury Road, the farmers' market, widely regarded as the finest in the country. A new Third Space gym is set to arrive at the end of the year, alongside the growing constellation of pilates studios and yoga spaces on Lonsdale Road.
The wider setting rewards equally. Maida Vale's grand mansion blocks and the waterways of Little Venice lie just to the south; a different register entirely, quieter and more contemplative, with the Grand Union Canal and its colourful narrowboats offering one of London's great weekend walks.
Queen's Park station places the Bakerloo line and London Overground on the doorstep. Paddington, with its Elizabeth line connection to the West End, Heathrow and beyond, is a short ride away.
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