Following the 1851
Great Exhibition in
Hyde Park, an area, west of what is now Exhibition Road, was purchased by the commissioners of the exhibition, in order to create a base for institutions dedicated to the arts and sciences, leading to the foundation of the
Royal Albert Hall, three museums, the
Royal School of Mines later a world renowned technological university, the
Royal College of Music and the
Royal College of Organists there. The market gardens of the rural area began to make way for a series of hospitals, such as the
Brompton Hospital and the
New Cancer Hospital along nearby Fulham Road. Adjacent landowners began to develop the land in the 1860s as a result of the transport hub and the general urbanisation boom west of London, and led to the eventual absorption of Brompton and its station into Kensington. It was sealed by the arrival of the
Metropolitan and
District Railways at Brompton, but for public relations reasons, it was re-named "South Kensington" in 1868. To facilitate public access to the museums, the railway company built a pedestrian tunnel directly from the station concourse to an exit halfway up Exhibition Road, next to the now defunct Royal Mail sorting office, to avoid crowds having to cross the Cromwell Road. In 1906 the new
Great Northern, Piccadilly and Brompton Railway company opened the
Brompton Road tube station in the vicinity, thus adding a link directly to the political, commercial and financial heart of the capital in
Westminster, the
West End and the
City of London, but owing to under use, it was shut in 1934. During the
Second World War it was used by the
26th (London) Anti-Aircraft Brigade. Since the
First World War it has become a cosmopolitan area attracting Belgian and French refugees, but also Poles during the
Second World War and after, as well as latterly Spanish, Italian, and American expatriates. Some residents also have a Middle Eastern origin. The French presence is emphasised by the
Lycée Français Charles de Gaulle, the
French Institute, housing a theatre now used as the Ciné
Lumière with nearby the
Alliance française, as well as the Consulate General of France, not far from the
French Embassy in
Knightsbridge. With a French bookshop and many international cafés in the area, it has been called "Paris's 21st arrondissement". File:Kensington, London, UK - panoramio (52).jpg|
Exhibition Road,
shared space File:BBC Proms at the Royal Albert Hall -26July2008.jpg|
Royal Albert Hall, located on
Kensington Gore File:London - Imperial College of Science and Technology.jpg|
Imperial College, South Kensington, London File:Ciné Lumière, South Kensington, SW7 (2477001202).jpg|
French Institute, housing Ciné Lumière, Queensberry, Place SW7
Iranian Embassy siege In April and May 1980 a group of six
Iranian Arabs entered the
Iranian Embassy in South Kensington and took the staff, visitors and a diplomatic policeman hostage. There followed a six-day siege during which one of the hostages was killed. The British
SAS finally stormed the building in a 17-minute operation, bringing out the hostages and the one surviving gunman, who was subsequently sentenced to 27 years in prison for his part in the offences. ==Geography==