Berrylands is a settlement of
Anglo-Saxon origin that is close to the
Thames. Berrylands originally formed part of the
Municipal Borough of Surbiton, but in 1965 it was incorporated as part of the
Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames. Most of the present housing development took place in the 1930s on the former Berrylands Farm. Old maps from the 1860s show the western banks of the
Hogsmill River and everything around them to be mostly empty apart from a few small trails and farm buildings with no evidence of real human settlement. The area had absolutely no annotations of the word Berrylands to mark the area. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the only prominent structure was the Regent House, the main building of Berrylands Farm. The land was developed around the early 1930s and was complemented in 1933 with the opening of
Berrylands Station. The construction of all the homes in one go was the reason why they all look similar. The Regent House was demolished to make way for new housing, with the street where the building used to stand appropriately being named Regent Road. In some gardens, parts of the regent house's foundation are still visible. The
Surbiton Lagoon lido opened in 1934, but later closed in 1980, and was demolished at the end of the decade. This area was subsequently transformed into a park now owned and managed by Kingston Council, known as Berrylands Park, with a small area to the south developed into housing, creating Meldone Close. By Meldone Close a small car park was also constructed. ==Etymology==