Latitude: 51.5191 / 51°31'8"N
Longitude: -0.1474 / 0°8'50"W
OS Eastings: 528637
OS Northings: 181649
OS Grid: TQ286816
Mapcode National: GBR C9.2M
Mapcode Global: VHGQZ.D2GS
Plus Code: 9C3XGV93+J3
Entry Name: 63, Harley Street
Listing Date: 13 October 2009
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1393479
English Heritage Legacy ID: 507573
ID on this website: 101393479
Location: Marylebone, Westminster, London, W1G
County: London
District: City of Westminster
Electoral Ward/Division: Marylebone High Street
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: City of Westminster
Traditional County: Middlesex
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Greater London
Church of England Parish: All Souls Langham Place
Church of England Diocese: London
Tagged with: Building
1900/0/10462 HARLEY STREET
13-OCT-09 63
GV II
House and consulting rooms, 1934, for the celebrated ophthalmic surgeon Sir Stewart Duke-Elder, to designs by Wimperis, Simpson and Guthrie. Lighting designed by Waldo Maitland. Minor later alterations.
EXTERIOR: 63 Harley Street occupies the plot of a Georgian terraced house and the three window bay façade echoes the building it replaced. It has four storeys plus basement and attic with dormer windows. The building is steel-framed, with ashlar-facing to Harley Street, brick to the rear, and a slate roof. The detailing and proportions of the Harley Street frontage are classical, with a piano nobile, upper storeys of diminishing heights, and a dentil cornice. The windows are bronze casements with external shutters on the fourth floor. Yet there are modern elements to this composition too: the continuous sill of the fourth floor windows, for example, and the door's capital-less fluted columns which are Art-Deco in style. The traditional iron railings bounding the basement area have panels of Art-Deco ironwork to either side of the entrance step, the swirl-and-zigzag motif based on the figure 63. The same motif is repeated in the grille of the bronze and glass double doors, and in a fanlight where the swirls and zigzags form a '63'. The ironwork along the continuous piano nobile balcony is in a different, geometric design made up of horizontal rectangles. The detailing is restrained, with no mouldings to the upper floor windows and only very simple ones to those of the ground and first floor, and was described in the Architect and Building News as 'the modern manner at its best'. The façade bears an English Heritage Blue Plaque to Sir Stewart Duke-Elder, added in 2002.
INTERIOR: The original plans of the house were published in the architectural press, and from these it is possible to describe the rooms by their original functions. The ground floor contains an entrance hall and waiting room (now opened out into a single room), secretary's room and consulting room for Sir Stewart Duke-Elder, as well a cloakroom and WC. The entrance hall is panelled in sycamore in part with doors and skirting in walnut. There is a panelled alcove with bamboo plinth designed to house a sculpture or (as shown in historic photographs) a vase, lit from below. The ceiling has a slender fluted cornice and shallow, rectangular mouldings; the original light fitting, also a shallow rectangle which throws light up onto the ceiling, survives too. The interior lighting scheme was designed by Waldo Maitland and is an important feature of all the principal rooms.
The main stair is located in the entrance hall, this with solid balustrade with wood capping and brass handrail. The bottom steps radiate out with curved corners, their treads in a different coloured wood to the risers and the step's profile is traced in the walnut skirting of the wall. There is a radiator grille set under the stairs with the same ironwork pattern as the outside door, and a further two radiators at either side of the vestibule, all in bronze. The vestibule also contains fixed umbrella holders, inset light panels in the ceiling and bronze doors. Off the entrance hall is the original lift, its motor housed in the attic; the secretary's room which retains its fixed index-card filing cabinet and drawers; a cloakroom, also with fixed furniture; and a WC with an original sink. The adjoining former waiting room retains some of its original panelling and a fireplace.
The consulting room is located to the rear of the building where it abuts a neighbouring property. Next to the back wall, in what is the darkest part of the building, the office is part-partitioned off to create a dark room for examining eye patients. This is panelled and retains its original lights. The main consulting space is lit by a large window overlooking an inner light well in the centre of the building. This wall is dramatically curved, as is the window which has metal glazing bars and bent glass. The curved shape is matched in the room's cornice, ceiling mouldings, the consultant's kidney-shaped desk, and the saucer-shaped skylight. The latter was designed to diffuse natural light in the room, obviating the need for additional artificial light. The room is panelled in Australian walnut with skirting and cappings of Macassar ebony and there are several in-built book cases. One wall contains an alcove lined with lights and mirrors in a brass frame. There is a marble fireplace with fluted reveals and a curved window seat. A similarly dynamic space is the elliptical staircase leading from the corridor outside Sir Stewart's consulting room to that of his wife, on the floor above. This has a brass handrail and metal balustrade and each tread is in a different type of wood to the main risers and the string. The ceiling, despite the stair only running up one floor, echoes the stair's profile with each step illuminated by specially-placed lighting. The panelling also contains shallow vertical pleating stepping back along the wall.
The first floor contains the former dining room and Sir Stewart's library. The latter has a fluted architrave to the door, built-in book shelves, desk, window seat, and fireside seats; both have original fireplaces, fluted vertical moulding to the walls, and a coved cornice to the ceiling. The dining room fireplace is in a recessed bay, with concealed down-lighting from above. There is further concealing up-lighting in the cornice. The proportions of the dining room have been disrupted by a modern kitchen that has been inserted into its corner and the adjoining former service room. The first floor landing contains built-in cupboards and there are panels of lights in brass surrounds set into the ceiling next to these cupboards too.
Sir Stewart's former bedroom, dressing room, bathroom and breakfast room are located on the second floor and all retain some original fittings including drawers and cupboards in the bedroom and a bathroom suite. The third floor contains a guest bedroom and servants' rooms, the former with fitted cupboards and a surviving bathroom suite. There are other maids' rooms on the top floor, accessed by a separate concrete staircase. There are two butlers' pantries with original sinks and a laundry cupboard on the upper floors.
HISTORY: 63 Harley Street was both residence and consulting rooms for Sir Stewart Duke-Elder (1898-1978) and his wife, Lady Phyllis Mary née Edgar, herself an ophthalmologist. Here Sir Stewart attended to his many high-profile clients, who included prime minister J Ramsay MacDonald on whom he operated for glaucoma in 1932. Sir Stewart was surgeon-oculist to the royal family for 29 years - to Edward VIII, George VI, and Elizabeth II - and consultant ophthalmic surgeon to the army in WWII. As well as authoring the definitive work on his subject, the 'Text-Book of Ophthalmology', he was instrumental in the inauguration of the faculty of ophthalmologists at the Royal College of Surgeons in 1945 and the founding of the Institute of Ophthalmology in London in 1948. Knighted in 1933, he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1960, a distinction rarely awarded to a clinician. An English Heritage blue plaque on the building's exterior, erected in 2002, commemorates Sir Stewart Duke-Elder's connection with 63 Harley Street. Sir Stewart lived and worked here from 1934 until 1963, when the building was sold to fellow ophthalmic surgeon Sir Allen Goldsmith. Duke-Elder continued to work at this address until his retirement in 1976.
Architects Edmund Wimperis and William Begg Simpson were in partnership from 1913, joined by Leonard Rome Guthrie in 1925 just as the firm had won a competition for the rebuilding of Fortnum & Masons, Piccadilly. Their style was eclectic, in common with many architectural practices in the interwar years, ranging from traditional (as at Fortnum & Masons) to modern (offices at 1-4 Leicester Square of 1937-8, for example). The practice designed the Cambridge Theatre, Seven Dials, London (Grade II), an early London example of the Moderne, expressionist style pioneered in Germany during the 1920s, and several private houses in Mayfair, the latter secured through Wimperis' position as an architect to the Grosvenor Estate.
SOURCES:
'The New Town House' in The Architect and Building News (March 30, 1934)
Philip Awdry, 'Elder, Sir (William) Stewart Duke- (1898-1978)', rev., Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/31052, accessed 25 Sept 2009]
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION:
63 Harley Street, Marylebone, is designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
* an exemplar of the inter-war town house with a characteristic combination of traditional and modern elements
* restrained façade with stylish Art-Deco detailing, which echoes the Georgian proportions of the house it replaced
* the consulting room and elliptical stair are dynamic spaces with specially-designed lighting to illuminate special features by Waldo Maitland
* remarkable survival of good quality interior fittings including joinery in different types of wood, stair with brass handrail, decorative metalwork, fluted plasterwork and inbuilt furniture
* designed by a significant inter-war practice, Wimperis, Simpson and Guthrie;
* strong connection with the renowned ophthalmic surgeon Sir Stewart Duke-Elder (1898-1978), who purpose built 63 Harley Street as his the house and consulting rooms
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