Living in Battersea: area guide to homes, schools and transport

The park, the iconic power station and the dogs and cats home — these three institutions, known the world over, bear the name of Battersea and anchor this south London suburb into the consciousness of everyone in the capital. 

The big news now in Battersea is the redevelopment of the power station and the surrounding area. When this £8 billion project is complete, there will be a new riverside park and high street, shops, hotels, restaurants and cafés, along with 4,000 glitzy new homes. Also moving in will be the US Embassy, relocating to Nine Elms in 2017 from Grosvenor Square in Mayfair.

Battersea Park is a firm favourite with the local community. Ten years ago it had an £11.4 million facelift, with the restoration of many of the Victorian and Festival of Britain features, including the water fountains that put on spectacular displays throughout the day. The newest draw is a winter garden in the south-west corner, designed by TV favourite Dan Pearson. 

Battersea Power Station, with its four distinctive white chimneys, is one of the capital’s best-known landmarks. When it was built in the Thirties, one of the most famous architects of the day, Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, was brought in to counter opposition from Chelsea residents who didn’t want a power station on their doorstep. Scott’s role was to enhance the external appearance, so he remodelled the chimneys to resemble classical columns. 

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The power station was extended in the Fifties, but coal barges stopped arriving in 1983, when it closed. There then followed nearly 30 years of neglect and failed plans until 2012, when Malaysian developers SP Setia, Sime Darby and Employees Provident Fund bought the 42-acre site for £400 million and set about implementing architect Rafael Viñoly’s master plan of glassy tall apartment blocks and landscaped walkways. 

Such was the excitement when the first new flats in Circus West went on sale in January 2013 that three quarters of the 866 homes sold in the first four days, even though they wouldn’t be ready for another four years. 

Now the cranes are hovering above two predominantly residential developments designed by two of the world’s great architects — Sir Norman Foster and Frank Gehry. Launched in October last year, the Foster + Partners-designed Battersea Roof Gardens has a rippling façade with views over Battersea Park, while Gehry Partners’ Prospect Place is a cluster of five buildings, which will offer stunning views of the power  station. None of this would have been possible without a drastic improvement to Battersea’s crumbling transport infrastructure. 

The arrival of the US Embassy was the spur that brought forth funding for the Northern line extension from Kennington. Two new stations will open in 2020 at Nine Elms and south of the Battersea Power Station development in Battersea Park Road, close to the existing Battersea Park train station. Both new stations will be in Zone 1. 

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What there is to buy in Battersea

Battersea is now a property market of two halves, with the riverside dominated by new flats all the way from Vauxhall to Wandsworth, while the hinterland features mansion flats close to Battersea Park and roads of Victorian terrace houses. The most expensive flat on the market now is a three-bedroom duplex penthouse in Boiler House Square in the power station. It has a large terrace on one of the chimneys and is for sale at £8.35 million, but it won’t be ready until 2019. The most expensive period property for sale is a six-bedroom terrace house in Albert Bridge Road at £4,595,000.

Demand for houses close to the area’s two popular state primary schools, Honeywell and Belleville, can push up prices. The most expensive house currently for sale here is a five-bedroom double-fronted property in Honeywell Road, priced £3.5 million.

So-called “Little India” — oddly, the streets have Afghan names, not Indian ones — lies between Falcon Road and Battersea Park Road. A three-bedroom house in Candahar Road, in need of modernisation, is on sale for £800,000. The “Sisters Roads” is another misnomer, as the three streets, west of Battersea Bridge Road, are named after the developer Edward Pain’s mother, Ursula, first wife Edna and second wife Octavia. Unusually, most of the houses are semi-detached villas. A three-bedroom semi-detached house in Henning Street is for sale for £1.55 million.

The Shaftesbury Park Estate between Queenstown Road and Latchmere Road has two-bedroom Victorian workmen’s cottages, prettily designed with decorative porches. In Tyneham Road, there is a two-bedroom cottage for sale for £849,950.

Estate agent Charlie Mitchell, from the Battersea Park office of Douglas Gordon, says Battersea property prices have risen an average of 30 per cent over the past three years, while posh neighbour Chelsea, across the river, has only seen rises of about seven per cent. “Our long-term view is that the gap between Battersea and Chelsea will narrow over time,” he says.

Battersea Dogs Cats Home is the world’s best-known animal rescue charity. It began life in 1860 in an abandoned stableyard in Holloway when Mary Tealby opened The Temporary Home for Lost and Starving Dogs. Little is known about the life of Tealby beyond the fact that she was born in Huntingdon and died in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire. The dogs home, which took in an average of 13 dogs and nine cats a day, moved to Battersea in 1871, where it has been ever since. In 1885, Queen Victoria became its first royal patron. 

Travel: Battersea has train stations at Clapham Junction — trains to Victoria in eight minutes, while to Waterloo it is nine minutes — Battersea Park, where services to Victoria take six minutes, and Queenstown Road, where trains to Waterloo take seven minutes. All trains are in Zone 2 and an annual travelcard to Zone 1 costs £1,284.

The area attracts: estate agent Tamzin Incledon, from the local branch of Douglas Gordon, says young professionals and families love the area for its shops and schools. “We have seen a big influx of French families over the past few years and we are beginning to see American families, too, attracted by the arrival of the US Embassy in Nine Elms in 2017.”

 

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What there is to rent in Battersea

 

Postcode: SW11 is the Battersea postcode, although it does stray into SW8 on its eastern edge, the South Lambeth postcode.

Best roads: the most expensive houses are in Cambridge Road, Parkgate Road and Warriner Gardens, all roads with large houses close to Battersea Park.

The adjoining Battersea gasholders site in Prince of Wales Drive now has planning permission for 839 (201 affordable) new homes to be built by developer St William, a joint venture formed by National Grid and Berkeley Group. The mixed-use development designed by architects Squire Partners will have 50,000sq ft of educational space, a nursery, supermarket, café and public realm improvements. The flats will be ready in 2019.

Schools

There is a wide choice of private schools. The primary infant and primary schools are L’Ecole de Battersea (co-ed, ages three to 11) in Trott Street, L’Ecole du Parc (co-ed, ages 18 months to five) in Garfield Road and Stormont Road, Parkgate House (co-ed, ages two to 11) in Clapham Common North Side, Dolphin School (co-ed, ages two to 11) a Christian school in Northcote Road, and Oliver House (co-ed, ages three to 11), a Catholic school in Nightingale Lane. There are preparatory schools, too. Thomas’s has two branches — Thomas’s Battersea (co-ed, ages four to 13) in Battersea High Street and Thomas’s Clapham (co-ed, ages four to 13) in Broomwood Road.


WHAT THE LOCALS RECOMMEND ON TWITTER

@UPCLondon For a chilled-out brunch, we’d highly recommend @PelicanCafeBar

@MrsVickiDay Try L’Antipasto Battersea Park Rd, a real hidden gem; also The Butcher Grill Parkgate Road plus the amazing Le QuecumBar

@BatterseaHomes Santa Maria del Sur in Queenstown Road, @ChezBruce on Wandsworth Common @indianmoment in Northcote Road are some of our favourites

@MattChristmas1 I’d recommend Soif, the neighbourhood bistro and wine shop, at 27 Battersea Rise


 

Shops and restaurants

Battersea’s main shopping centre is around Clapham Junction and up St John’s Road, where there is a branch of Debenhams, locals still call it Arding Hobbs, a large Asda, and Lidl. St John’s Road leads into Northcote Road — the road that runs through the middle of the “between the Commons” area — also known as “nappy valley”. Here, the shops are smarter, with branches of skincare chains such as Neal’s Yard, Kiehl’s and Space.NK. Fashionistas will love checking out White Stuff, Jack Wills, Phase Eight, Joules, LK Bennett, Crew, Whistles and Jigsaw. Chain restaurants include Nando’s, Gourmet Burger Kitchen, Byron, Franco Manca and Bill’s. In recent years, Northcote Road has lost many of its independent shops, but two butchers remain — Hennessy and Dove Son — plus longstanding jewellers Asquiths, toy shop QT Toys and sportshop Capstick. Breadstall is just that — a long market stall selling bread, cakes, pizzas and quiches.

 

Open space: Battersea Park is the local playground where locals can take long riverside walks.

Council: Wandsworth is Conservative-controlled and Band D Council tax for this year is £704.57.

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Three things about Battersea