Singer and model Sophie Ellis-Bextor seen during a photo shoot in Fitzroy Square. The area today lures as many celebrities to its clubs and bars as it did 100 years ago.
Mention Fitzrovia and most people will scratch their heads in confusion. Yet this central London district is one of the most celebrated neighborhoods in the capital, an upmarket enclave of great historical significance and once home to many of London's artists, intellectuals, and bohemians. Previously voted the best place to live in London by the 'Sunday Times,' Fitzrovia today is still a celebrity hangout, and its hotels, pubs, and restaurants remain some of the most alluring destinations in the city.
Browse the gallery and start exploring fashionable Fitzrovia.
Lots of historic pubs enliven Fitzrovia. The Yorkshire Grey on the corner of Langham Street and Middleton Place regularly hosted English author and playwright J. B. Priestley during World War II.
Dating back to 1891, Fitzrovia Chapel stands in Pearson Square, surrounded by the steel and glass of the modern Fitzroy Place development. The building's interior is exquisitely decorated with marble and mosaics. Pictured is the elaborate baptistery.
The five-star luxury boutique Charlotte Street Hotel is tastefully furnished with 20th-century contemporary art. It's a place to be seen, and to people watch.
Dozens of blue plaques—historical markers that commemorate a link between a location and a famous person, event, or former building on the site—can be seen in Fitzrovia.
The Fitzroy Tavern, situated on the corner of Charlotte Street and Windmill Street, was famous from the 1920s to the mid-1950s as the meeting place for many of London's artists, intellectuals, and bohemians.
The Newman Arms at 23 Rathbone Street appears in George Orwell's novel 'Nineteen-Eighty Four' as the "proles" pub, and is featured again in 'Keep the Aspidistra Flying.' The classic pub closed in 2015 and was given a makeover before going on the market again.
Buildings where the famous lived are clearly marked: Samuel Morse, for example, lived at 141 Cleveland Street.
The museum's collection consists mainly of rare and valuable Victorian dolls, but visitors can also admire an astonishing array of teddy bears, tin soldiers, and puppets, among other yesteryear playthings.
Fitzrovia, the London district you've probably never heard of
This upmarket neighborhood brims with history and celebrity visitors
LIFESTYLE Fitzrovia
Mention Fitzrovia and most people will scratch their heads in confusion. Yet this central London district is one of the most celebrated neighborhoods in the capital, an upmarket enclave of great historical significance and once home to many of London's artists, intellectuals, and bohemians. Previously voted the best place to live in London by the 'Sunday Times,' Fitzrovia today is still a celebrity hangout, and its hotels, pubs, and restaurants remain some of the most alluring destinations in the city.
Browse the gallery and start exploring fashionable Fitzrovia.