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A pick of the best classic townhouses

'You have a town house, I hope?' Thus is Jack Worthing quizzed by Lady Bracknell in Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Ernest.

The play was written towards the end of the 19th century when it was customary for wealthy families to own both a country house and a house in town to which they and their staff decamped for the social season. In recent years this tradition has been depicted in a variety of period dramas.

Townhouses continue to be just as desirable today as they were centuries ago. In London, the grand white stucco-fronted buildings and garden squares such as Chester, Eaton, Belgrave and Wilton Crescent are regularly cited as golden, globally renowned addresses.

Bath’s honey-coloured Georgian crescents and terraces are inspired by Palladian and neoclassical architecture, with its two most famous addresses – The Royal Crescent and The Circus – encompassing dramatic, sweeping curved lines.

Edinburgh, Cheltenham and Bristol are also well-known hotspots for classic townhouses, while Oxford, Cambridge and York are home to some particularly fine examples too.

Some of the highest value townhouses have leisure facilities as well as a rear mews or coach houses – which originally served as stables, horse-drawn carriage storage and grooms quarters but today are often open-plan, light spaces used as secondary accommodation.

While of course they vary in size and specification, the first-floor drawing room – with floor-to-ceiling windows and high ceilings – remains one of the most important rooms for entertaining and socialising.

If you’re drawn to the charm of a townhouse, featured below is a selection of properties currently on the market.

 

Further information

Contact Toby Anderdon or Alistair Heather

 

 

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