1–8 Collingham Gardens are all Grade II* listed, and were designed by
Ernest George in 1881–84. The High Commission of Saint Lucia is at no 1, as is the High Commission of
Dominica, in a building that was the
West Indian Students' Centre from 1955. At no 3 In the late 1950s, Africa Unity House was set up, funded by the government of newly independent
Ghana, to serve as a base for African student organisations in the UK, as well as providing office space for liberation movements such as the
African National Congress. No 19 was home to
Howard Carter (1874–1939), the British archaeologist and Egyptologist who discovered the tomb of
Tutankhamun. In 1999,
English Heritage placed a
blue plaque on the Victorian house where Carter once lived. Howard Carter gave his London address as 19b Collingham Gardens for most of the 1920s, and was likely renting part of his brother Samuel's home as a summer pied-à-terre. No 30 is part of the
Embassy of Qatar, London. It was once the main site of the embassy, but was converted into a medical centre in the 1970s when it moved to better premises. == In popular culture ==