Mayfair, street by street
Neighbourhoods
Seven addresses that together make Mayfair. Click through for the venues, hotels, bars, and stories on each.
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View →Bond Street
Mayfair's spine of luxury - Old and New Bond Street together carry more jewellers, watchmakers, and flagship boutiques per metre than anywhere else in London. The serious side of Mayfair commerce, with the auction houses (Sotheby's, Bonhams) one block east.
W1J
View →Berkeley Square
Mayfair's social centre. The plane trees frame a dense ring of restaurants (Sexy Fish, Bacchanalia, Annabel's, George), the Roundhouse, and some of the most contested table reservations in London.
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View →Park Lane
The grand hotel mile: the Dorchester, 45 Park Lane, the InterContinental, the Four Seasons, the new Six Senses and the next wave of Park Lane openings. The strip that defines London hotel luxury.
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View →Shepherd Market
The village inside the neighbourhood. Lanes too narrow for cars, pubs that have been open since the 1700s, wine bars, antiquarian booksellers - a quietly perfect contradiction to the polish of Mount Street ten minutes north.
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View →Mount Street
The most photogenic street in Mayfair, anchored by Scott's, the Connaught, Marc Jacobs, Roksanda, and the Mount Street gardens. Where the neighbourhood looks most like itself.
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View →Hanover Square
Mayfair's quietest corner, anchored by St George's Hanover Square (London's society wedding church for two centuries) and ringed by Georgian townhouses now occupied by tailors, advisors, and the new wave of independent restaurants.
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View →Conduit Street
Where Mayfair meets Soho. Sketch's pink dining room, the bookended Westbury Hotel, Tom Ford, Vivienne Westwood - a single street that captures both the fashion side and the dining side of the neighbourhood.