Dryden Street / Nos. 1-5 (odd)

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History

Dryden Street, formerly Dirty Lane, was laid out in the late 17th century and rebuilt in the 19th century. It is part of the Long Acre Estate belonging to the Mercers’ Company and was re-developed following the widening of Drury Lane in 1835, itself caused by the opening of Waterloo Bridge.

The adjoining stretch of Drury Lane was reconstructed with symmetrical classical elevations in the spirit of Nash’s Metropolitan Improvements to the west. The hinterland, including Dryden Street, was rebuilt in the same materials and proportions, but using simpler language suited to its subsidiary character. It was rebuilt as a shopping street with integral shopfronts on the ground floor, several part-surviving on the north side of the street, with residential above. It perpetuates the more domestic nature of the Mercers’ Estate before the large-scale late-Victorian industrialisation and commercial redevelopment of the estate, though there are also on this south side good Victorian warehouses.

Long Acre Long Acre Shaftesbury Avenue Charing Cross Road Litchfield Street Mercer Street Mercer Street Earlham Street Earlham Street Shelton Street Shelton Street Shelton Street Shelton Street Dryden Street Arne Street Drury Lane Parker Street Shelton Street West Street Tower Street Monmouth Street Monmouth Street Shorts Gardens Shorts Gardens Neal Street Neal’s Yard Neal Street Neal Street Endell Street Endell Street Endell Street Endell Street Betterton Street Langley Street Langley Ct James Street Floral Street Bow Street Bow Street Shorts Gardens Mercer Street Flitcroft Street Stacey Street New Compton Street St Giles Passage Charing Cross Road Shaftesbury Avenue High Holborn Long Acre