Tredegar Square
Tredegar Square pronounced is a well-preserved Georgian square in Mile End, within the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. The square has a garden in the centre with lawns and large trees. Tredegar Square is legally protected by the Fields in Trust charity as part of the King George's Fields programme, ensuring it will remain as a green space in perpetuity.
Location
Tredegar Square is 90 metres north of the main commercial thoroughfare of the district, Mile End Road. Six roads branch off the square including one sharing its name, Tredegar Square; the eponymous roadway forms an intersection with Mile End Road, about 120 metres east of Mile End tube station.Architecture
In pale brown brick, three nearly identical unbroken terraces line the west, south and east sides of the square, with long continuous white cornices, sash windows, fanlights, railings in front of basements and bold, traditional single-colour doors. All windows are white framed and a stucco white frame fronts the four central houses of each of these three rows, with a white gable façade feature centered above the middle two houses. The north terrace is a different design, with its own similar shaped houses or sets of subdivided houses; these have white, ashlar-faced fronts or genuine large carved stone block facings, black railings on white-painted concrete and heavily porticoed, projecting and recessed features — for example, pediments above a feature window in the few recesses. The level of complex forms and white stone-like appearance of the north terrace resembles many of the blocks in Belgravia and Bayswater.History
The south and west sides of the square were completed in the 1830s, and the rest by 1847.The square takes its name from the landowner, Sir [Charles Morgan, 2nd Baronet], and his family estate Tredegar House near Newport, South Wales. One block north of the square is the Lord Tredegar pub and one block east The Morgan Arms, on Morgan Street.
The industrial town of Tredegar in South Wales was also named after the Tredegar estate, following the establishment nearby of The Tredegar Iron Company in 1800, on land owned by the Morgan family.