Liberty (London)
United Kingdom /
England /
London /
A4 Regent Street
World
/ United Kingdom
/ England
/ London
clothes store / boutique, department store
Iconic London Department Store founded in 1875 by Arthur Liberty. Famous for prints and fabric designs.
The mock-Tudor building on Great Marlborough Street contains the store, while the neoclassical building on Regent Street has shops, including The Gap, Desigual and COS on the ground floor and Liberty corporate offices above.
Liberty is a well known store in Regent Street in central London, England at the heart of the West End shopping district. It was founded by Arthur Lasenby Liberty in 1875 to sell ornaments, fabrics and miscellaneous art objects from Japan and the Far East.
Liberty & Co. first catered for an eclectic mixture of popular styles, but then went on to develop a fundamentally different style closely linked to the aesthetic movement of the 1890s and Art Nouveau. The company became synonymous with this new style to the extent that in Italy, Art Nouveau became known as Stile Liberty after the London shop.
Liberty still has a distinctive style and produces some of its own fabrics. Its building is composed of two wings. The older wing fronts Great Marlborough Street and is one of the most prominent Tudor revival Arts and Crafts buildings in London. It is a Grade II* listed building. The timbers used in the construction of the building (built in 1924) were taken from two british naval ships, the HMS Impregnable and HMS Hindustan.[1] The Regent Street wing is early 20th century neo-Baroque, like most of the rest of Regent Street. This part is Grade II listed. These days the shop sells up to date fashions, cosmetics, accessories, gifts etc. in addition to its homewares and furniture. The shop is noted for not feeling like a typical large department store, as it is small and intimate with stairs and decorative elevators instead of escalators and is spread out around several wooden balconied, "mock-Tudor" style atriums with glass roofs over, which are decorated with thousands of tiny lights at Christmas.
www.liberty.co.uk/
The mock-Tudor building on Great Marlborough Street contains the store, while the neoclassical building on Regent Street has shops, including The Gap, Desigual and COS on the ground floor and Liberty corporate offices above.
Liberty is a well known store in Regent Street in central London, England at the heart of the West End shopping district. It was founded by Arthur Lasenby Liberty in 1875 to sell ornaments, fabrics and miscellaneous art objects from Japan and the Far East.
Liberty & Co. first catered for an eclectic mixture of popular styles, but then went on to develop a fundamentally different style closely linked to the aesthetic movement of the 1890s and Art Nouveau. The company became synonymous with this new style to the extent that in Italy, Art Nouveau became known as Stile Liberty after the London shop.
Liberty still has a distinctive style and produces some of its own fabrics. Its building is composed of two wings. The older wing fronts Great Marlborough Street and is one of the most prominent Tudor revival Arts and Crafts buildings in London. It is a Grade II* listed building. The timbers used in the construction of the building (built in 1924) were taken from two british naval ships, the HMS Impregnable and HMS Hindustan.[1] The Regent Street wing is early 20th century neo-Baroque, like most of the rest of Regent Street. This part is Grade II listed. These days the shop sells up to date fashions, cosmetics, accessories, gifts etc. in addition to its homewares and furniture. The shop is noted for not feeling like a typical large department store, as it is small and intimate with stairs and decorative elevators instead of escalators and is spread out around several wooden balconied, "mock-Tudor" style atriums with glass roofs over, which are decorated with thousands of tiny lights at Christmas.
www.liberty.co.uk/
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberty_(department_store)
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 51°30'49"N -0°8'24"E
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