Spring 2025: 5 of the best London Mews to visit

London Mews really come to life in the spring, with their blossom-lined streets, bulbs bursting out of window boxes and residents meeting for drinks and snacks outside their properties.
5 London Mews streets to visit this Spring:
There’s an air of excitement in the air as the season gets underway and no better time to step out and explore the plethora of special mews streets dotted around Prime Central London. Below, we detail our top 5 London Mews streets to visit this spring.
Bathurst Mews, W2
To set the scene and get you in the mood to embrace everything about mews, we’ll start off in Bathurst Mews W2 – one of the most pretty and certainly most traditional of London’s mews. Despite its quiet and quaint ambience, it’s also perfectly positioned for transport and travelling across London; close to Paddington Station, a speedy stroll north from Hyde Park and just moments away from Lancaster Gate. This long through-road off Bathurst Place is a cobbled mews street extending to 65 mews houses, that includes intact and converted garages.

Bathurst Mews was originally stable/coach house accommodation for the main houses in Bathurst Street. Today, it retains a nod to its equine heritage being home to the last remaining two riding schools in London – Ross Nye Stables and Hyde Park Stables. A common everyday sound is the clip-clop of horses’ hooves on the cobbles as they enter the mews and it’s always lovely to see.

Unsurprisingly, this epitome of mews perfection has scooped first prize in our annual ‘Mews in Bloom’ competition, when green-fingered Bathurst residents have shown their skill and impressed our expert judges with their gardening achievements. If you would like to join this talented enthusiastic mews community, then this glorious four-bedroom mews house could be just what you’ve been looking for. Alternatively, for those looking to rent, have a look at our Lettings listing page as we regularly launches properties to rent in this mews.
Hyde Park Gardens Mews, W2
A few moments’ walk leads you under an attractive brick-built listed arch on Clarendon Place into Hyde Park Garden Mews, which lies within the Bayswater Conservation Area. This elongated cobbled mews is home to 46 mainly two-storey, cottage-style mews properties with a blend of Victorian and modern façades.

The residents love to create a flowery oasis with many attractive window boxes and pots in front of their homes. Passers-by will enjoy seeing period architectural features including wrought iron balconies and Victorian streetlights as they walk along this mews street. This is a quintessential London mews that exudes character and is a riot of colour in spring.
Kynance Mews, SW7
You may recognise this London Mews from Instagram, TikTok or even from the big screen, as the location has been used for various films and TV series – Joe Goldberg from the thrilling Netflix series ‘You’, resided here in Season 4. It’s also been home to notable individuals, such as travel writer, Bruce Chatwin, who lived at Number 9 in 1969 for twelve months.

Springtime sees the famous wisteria of Kynance Mews bloom, climbing plants adorning the front of some mews houses pop with colour and a gorgeous array of planters and troughs are filled with clusters of purple, white, pink and blue flowers. It’s a must-visit for when you visit London.
St Luke’s Mews, W11
One of the mews that we manage properties on is the famous St Luke’s Mews in the lovely neighbourhood of Notting Hill. with its Victorian street lamps, ironwork balconies and brightly painted facades, it’s one of most iconic mews streets in London. It’s also a place that has been immortalised on film, as Keira Knightley’s mews home in ‘Love Actually’, which is why so many tourists flock to take their photo here.

After a stroll down the mews, make sure you take a peek at the little boutiques that line the high street or pay a visit to Portobello Market, only two streets away from this colourful, residential mews.
Pont Street Mews, SW1
Pont Street Mews is a small cobbled cul-de-sac with 26 luxury mews houses, that boasts Harrods as its ‘corner-shop’. and was built in 1879. Lying discreetly behind a brick archway, this mews is part of the ‘Hans Town’ Conservation Area named after Sir Hans Sloane, who acquired the area of Chelsea, and whose marriage into the Cadogan family led to the development of the estate.

Despite the fact this mews perhaps is not as colourful as others, its fantastic proximity to Knightsbridge and indeed Harrods, means that after exploring the cobbles, you can go for a leisurely shop and perhaps a nice refreshing drink at the Prada Caffè.
For anyone tempted to discover what a joy living in a mews brings, perhaps renting a mews house is a step in the right direction. Have a look at this exceptional four-bedroom mews house that we recently let in Pont Street Mews, which provided both a garage and two private parking spaces.

These are just some of our favourite mews in London during springtime, but when the sun is beaming and the air is fresh, we recommend just losing yourself in SW7 and W2 and seeing which cobbled side streets you end up discovering.
