91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Other

Streatham Street model houses

Inscription

{On the first floor frieze above the door:}
Model houses for families"

Site: Streatham Street model houses (1 memorial)

WC1, Streatham Street, Parnell House

There is no plaque (2022) but this is any important building so we decided to collect it.

Originally called 'Streatham Street Buildings' these are said to be the earliest surviving social housing flats in the world. has a drawing and plan dated at 1845.

gives "The most distinctive form of working-class housing in 19th century London was the multi-storey apartment block, built originally by charitable societies, and from the 1890s by public authorities. The prototype for such blocks was the Sailors’ Home in Well Street, Whitechapel (now demolished), opened in 1835 and designed by Henry Roberts (1803-76) the architect who set the pattern for philanthropic housing schemes in London, and influenced developments in Belgium, the Netherlands, France and Russia. In 1844 Roberts was a founder member of the Society for Improving the Condition of the Labouring Classes, for whom he built a set of Model Dwellings in Pentonville in 1844, and a model lodging house off Drury Lane in 1846. Both have been demolished, but his next project for the Society, a group of dwellings for 48 families in three blocks built around a courtyard in Streatham Street ... remains. Access to the apartments is by wrought-iron balconies, they are of fireproof construction, and each, at the time of construction, had its own water closet, a revolutionary feature for working class dwellings in England. Roberts went on to design the Model Houses shown at the Great Exhibition, now re-erected in Kennington Park Road, and several other blocks of apartments, but his career was cut short by scandal, and after 1853 he spent most of his time in Italy."

'Scandal' caught our eye and we found an explanation at : "In 1847 he had married the daughter of a Russian nobleman, Catherine de Swetschine, but by 1853 {aged 50} he was engaged in an indiscreet liaison with a working class lady described as 'a member of the lower orders'." And for that it seems he was lost to architecture for the next 26 years until his death in Florence.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

Nearby Memorials

Prince Albert's words of wisdom

Prince Albert's words of wisdom

SW1, Artillery Row, 8

What do you think Albert might be on about? We doubt many people would guess right. The answer is given in Make Architects pdf for this d...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Little Compton Street

Little Compton Street

WC2, Charing Cross Road

The grill is above a brick-walled tunnel which carries a mass of cables. The signs allow anyone working in the tunnels to navigate witho...

1 subject commemorated
University Boat Race stone - finish

University Boat Race stone - finish

SW14, Thames Bank

Not a memorial at all but interesting nonetheless - this  'University Stone', together with the striped 'University Post' opposite, mark ...

1 subject commemorated
Henry Cole at V&A

Henry Cole at V&A

SW7, Exhibition Road, Victoria & Albert Museum

April 2018: Freshly regilded and looking splendid – but with a new metal walkway cutting across it. The designers’ website even includes ...

1 subject commemorated
Three Kings at Eltham Palace

Three Kings at Eltham Palace

SE18, Wellington Street, Greenwich Town Hall

We wondered what brought about this gathering of kings (four if you include the host, King Edward III), but could not track down any refe...

5 subjects commemorated, 1 creator