WHERE WE WORK
Belgravia, Knightsbridge & more...
Chasemore Property's twenty years of experience, focusing mainly on Belgravia, Knightsbridge, Chelsea, South Kensington, Kensington, Holland Park, Earl's Court, Bayswater, Mayfair and Pimlico, mean that we are able to offer a succinct service and guide you through every step in all your property requirements.
Belgravia
Eaton Square and neighbouring Chester Square, their architectural elegance embellished by delightful Grosvenor-created gardens, continue to attract elite international homebuyers and investors as two of the most exclusive residential addresses in today's global property market.
Elizabeth Street, off Eaton Square, offers one of the world’s most sophisticated shopping experiences in a chic collection of specialist retailers, designer boutiques, niche luxury brands, and signature outlets. Motcomb Street, Pimlico Road, and Ebury Street provide further temptation with more of the best in artisan foods, high fashion and fine art.

Who lived here?
Brian Epstein, Beatles manager, 64 Chapel Street
Ian Fleming, James Bond author, 22B Ebury Street



Chelsea
Trendy King's Road, global shop window for the Swinging Sixties, showcased the Bazaar boutique of mini-skirt creator Mary Quant and psychedelic outlets such as Granny Takes a Trip. It all changed in the Seventies with Malcolm McLaren and Vivienne Westwood's punk emporium at No. 430.

Who lived here?
Oscar Wilde, wit & dramatist, 34 Tite Street
James Abbot McNeill Whistler, painter & etcher, 96 Cheyne Walk



Knightsbridge
The spectacular Egyptian Escalator, completed in 1997 by then owner Mohamed al Fayed, cost an estimated £30 million and depicts the story of the Valley of the Kings. Motto 'All things for all people everywhere', the retail Mecca in Knightsbridge once sold an alligator to actor Noel Coward, and the original Winnie the Pooh bear to author A.A. Milne.

Who lived here?
Jane Austen, novelist, 23 Hans Place
Arnold Bennett, novelist, 75 Cadogan Square
South Kensington
V&A, Science Museum, Natural History Museum, each of these centres of intellectual wonder between Kensington Gardens and Cromwell Road is visited by up to two million people every year. And locals are never short of somewhere to go on a wet Sunday afternoon

Who lived here?
Sir W.S. Gilbert, dramatist, 39 Harrington Gardens
Benny Hill, comedian, 1 Queen's Gate
Kensington
The average price of a mansion on the road close to the royals of Kensington Palace, marital home of Prince William and Kate, is a princely £19.2 million, perfectly affordable if you're the Sultan of Brunei or steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal - Britain's richest man.

Who lived here?
Dame Marie Rambert, ballet dancer, 19 Campden Hill Gardens
Robert Browning, poet, 29 De Vere Gardens



Pimlico
Raise your glasses please for a toast to Ben Pimlico, a London legend thanks to the nut-brown Pimlico ale brewed and served at his 17th century tavern in Hoxton. When South Belgravia fancied a new moniker, it reached for Ben's Pimlico.

Who lived here?
Laura Ashley, designer, 83 Cambridge Street
Laurence Olivier, actor, 22 Lupus Street
Mayfair
In time it became far too disorderly for well-heeled 18th century residents. All that ghastly bare-knuckle fighting lowered the tone of the place, and the event was KO’d into a Bow field, leaving its name behind. Shepherd Market, a small square and piazza, was created on the May Fair site by architect and developer Edward Shepherd. Shop here for your cufflinks or toy soldiers before supping a pint of traditional ale in Ye Grapes or Shepherds Tavern.

Who lived here?
Lord Horatio Nelson, naval commander, 103 and 147 New Bond Street
Florence Nightingale, nurse & hospital reformer, 10 South Street
Earl's Court
Earls Court is home to some of the most magnificent garden squares in prime Central London.
Battle-scarred Sioux warrior Long Wolf, said to have helped trounce General Custer at the Battle of the Little Big Horn, was finally felled by pneumonia at Earls Court on a European tour with Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show.

Who lived here?
Sir Alfred Hitchcock, film director, 153 Cromwell Road
Dame Ellen Terry, actress, 22 Barkston Gardens
Holland Park
Before the Earl of Holland moved in, Jacobean mansion Holland House was called Cope Castle after its creator Sir Walter Cope, Chancellor of the Exchequer under James I. Today opera sings out every summer in the park, which features a Japanese garden donated by Kyoto in 1991.

Who lived here?
William Holman Hunt, artist, 18 Melbury Road
Sir David Low, cartoonist, 33 Melbury Court
Bayswater
Bayswater converts into an open-air art gallery every Sunday when talented Bayswater Road Artists line the pavements bordering Hyde Park to sell their original creations. Open throughout the year, rain or shine.

Who lived here?
W.H. Smith, politician & newsagent, 12 Sussex Square
Robert Stephenson, railway engineer, 34 Gloucester Square
Marketing
Here are a few samples we use for marketing & advertorials:







