The area is renowned for its collection of well-preserved terraced houses that directly overlook the square and Mecklenburgh Square Garden.[2] The garden itself is accessible only to residents holding a key, except during special occasions like the Open Garden Squares Weekend when it is open to all visitors.[3][4]
The garden was laid out between 1809 and 1810 as the centrepiece of the newly developed Mecklenburgh Square; buildings on the eastern side were designed by architect Joseph Kay. The 2 acres (8,100 m2) garden is made up of formal lawns, gravel paths, mature plane trees and other ornamental trees. It contains a children's playground, and a tennis court. The east side of the garden is planted with plants native to New Zealand.[5]
To the west is Coram's Fields, and to the east is Gray's Inn Road, a major local thoroughfare. Goodenough College is a postgraduate residence and educational trust on the north and south sides of the square, and operates an academic-oriented hotel on the east side.[6]Russell Square tube station is located to the south-west of the square, and the railway termini King's Cross and St Pancras are a short walk north.[7]
Thomas Carlyle and Jane Welsh Carlyle took lodgings at 4 Amport Street, Mecklenburg Square from late Oct 1831 to 25 March 1832. It was here he wrote his acclaimed review of Boswell's Life of Johnson and the brief "Baron Von Goethe" article published in Fraser's magazine (March 1832).[10][11]
William Baylebridge lived for a time on Heathcote Street around the year 1909.
Ward Muir, photographer and author, lived at No. 44[15]
H.D. (Hilda Doolittle 1886 – 1961), the American poet, also lived briefly at No. 44, from 1917 to 1918, as recorded by a plaque, although not an English Heritage one.[16]
Helena Normanton, the first practising female barrister, with a number of other legal firsts to her name, is honoured by a blue plaque at no. 22, where she lived during her early legal career.[17]
Jane Ellen Harrison the classicist and linguist lived at no. 11 from 1926 to her death in 1928.[18]
Virginia Woolf lived at no. 37 from 1939 to 1940. The house was bombed in a German air raid in 1940 and replaced in 1957 by William Goodenough House[19] at Goodenough College.
^"MUIR Wardrop Openshaw of 44 Mecklenburg-square St. Pancras... Effects £2614 14s. 9d." in Wills and Administrations (England and Wales) 1927 (1928), p. 419