It was one of several terraces and crescents around
Regent's Park designed by the British
architect John Nash (1752–1835), under the patronage of the
Prince Regent (later
George IV). The terrace was to stand opposite the Prince's proposed palace in the park and was therefore of particular importance in the scheme. It was named after the Prince Regent's brother, the
Duke of Cumberland (King
George III's younger son), later
King of Hanover. The Terrace was built by William Mountford Nurse, with
James Thomson serving as resident architect, and was completed in 1826. It consists of three main blocks, linked by decorative
arches with typical
neoclassical style and grandeur. The central block includes a large sculptural pediment by
J. G. Bubb above a long colonnade of Ionic columns. Originally comprising 31 houses which were entirely reconstructed behind the original façade in the 1960s, some have been converted into flats but many houses are still separate family homes. An official report commented "there is not a single terrace which does not give the impression of hopeless dereliction". By 1957 the freeholder of the terrace, the
Crown Estate, had adopted the policy of returning it, and the other Nash terraces, to private residential use, as recommended ten years earlier in the report of a government committee on the post-war future of the terraces. ==Notable residents==