What did Patrick Abercrombie blue plaque do at Flat 1?

Flat 1Blue Plaque

The Story

# Patrick Abercrombie at 63 Egerton Gardens At this elegant Victorian townhouse in Brompton, Sir Patrick Abercrombie developed the visionary ideas that would transform how Britain thought about cities and their relationship to the surrounding countryside. Living here during the interwar years and beyond, Abercrombie used this address as both his domestic refuge and intellectual laboratory, where he refined the theories that would lead to his revolutionary County of London Plan of 1943 and his Greater London Plan of 1944—blueprints that shaped post-war urban development across the nation. It was from this understated Kensington address that one of the twentieth century's most influential town planners contemplated the future of sprawling London, envisioning green belts, controlled expansion, and the careful balance between progress and preservation that became the foundation of modern planning law. Standing outside this flat today, you're looking at the very building where Abercrombie imagined a better-ordered London—one that would influence urban planning decisions still felt in the city's layout, boundaries, and protected green spaces nearly a century later.

Location

Flat 1, 63 Egerton Gardens, Brompton

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