Retail and Great Marlborough Street. The
department store Dickins and Jones was established at No. 54
Oxford Street as Dickins and Smith before moving to Nos. 232–234 Regent Street in 1835. It was renamed to Dickins and Jones in the 1890s after John Pritchard Jones became a business partner, and by the turn of the 20th century employed over 200 people. It became part of the
Harrods group in 1914, and expanded to cover Nos. 224–244 in 1922, in a new building designed by
Sir Henry Tanner. In 1959,
House of Fraser took over the store by buying the Harrods group. In 2005, House of Fraser announced that the store would close the following year, after it had been making a loss for several years and not kept up with more fashion-conscious department stores elsewhere. The building has been redeveloped with small shop units on the lower floors and flats and offices above. is at the junction of Regent Street with
Great Marlborough Street. The
Liberty department store is based at Nos. 210–220. It was founded by entrepreneur
Arthur Lasenby Liberty, who had been inspired by the
1862 International Exhibition and wanted to open an oriental warehouse. He opened his first shop, East India House in 1875 at No. 218a, selling silk garments and various oriental goods. The shop expanded into other properties on Regent Street in the 1880s, separated by a jeweller's shop which was bridged by a double staircase called the "Camel's Back". Liberty later took over all of Nos. 140–150 Regent Street. In 1925, this complex was replaced by two new buildings, and a
mock tudor building (built by architects
Edwin T. Hall and his son Edwin S. Hall, constructed from the timbers of two ships, , and on neighbouring
Great Marlborough Street connected by a footbridge over
Kingly Street, which separates the properties. Store in Regent Street (centre), next door to Jaeger (left) The toy store
Hamleys is at No. 188 Regent Street, just south of Oxford Circus. It was founded as Noah's Ark at No. 231
High Holborn in 1760. An additional branch opened at Nos. 64–66 Regent Street in 1881, while the original High Holborn building burned down in 1901, moving to Nos. 86–87. The store was frequently the first to market the latest games and toys, and became a strong seller of
table tennis equipment in the late 19th century, allowing the sport to become popular. The business moved to Nos. 200–202, and moved to the current address in 1981. It claims to be the largest toy shop in the world. The main London branch of the clothing store
Jaeger was at Nos. 200–206 Regent Street. It was founded in 1884 by Lewis Tomalin, who was inspired by
naturalist Gustav Jäger's pioneering use of anti-animal fibre-based clothing. The first shop, on
Fore Street, had "Doctor Jaeger's Sanitary Woollen System" inscribed above the door.
Oscar Wilde was a regular visitor to the shop.
Henry Morton Stanley is known to have worn Jaeger clothing during his search for
David Livingstone in Africa, as is
Robert Falcon Scott on his fated trip to the
South Pole. The company moved to Regent Street in 1935; it moved out in January 2016. on Regent Street The
Apple Store opened on Regent Street on 20 November 2004. At the time, this was the first such store in Europe, with the others being in the United States and Japan. It was the largest Apple store worldwide until the opening of an even larger store in
Covent Garden in August 2010. The building that houses the store is a
grade II listed building built in 1898 for Venetian mosaicist
Antonio Salviati.
Austin Reed's flagship store was at Nos. 103–113 Regent Street for more than 85 years, having moved there in 1911. It had an atrium at its centre, housing glass lifts allowing viewing across all floors. The lower ground floor sold womenswear and also housed Austin's, the refurbished
Art Deco Barber Shop. In May 2011, the British fashion retailer
Superdry announced it would move into the building, paying £12m for the lease. In return, Austin Reed moved to the former
Aquascutum shop on the other side of the road. In 2016, Austin Reed filed for
administration, ending over 100 years' presence on Regent Street.
Aquascutum, first established in Mayfair in 1851, opened its flagship store at 100 Regent Street in 1895. It closed on 7 August 2011.
Swan and Edgar moved their haberdashery business into the newly-developed Regent Street in the 1820s; they first opened at number 49, and by 1848 had expanded into 45-51. The premises, which included a prominent frontage on Piccadilly Circus, were rebuilt by Sir Reginald Blomfield in 1910-20. The department store closed down in 1982. Hedges and Butler, wine and spirits merchant established in 1667, moved into 153 Regent Street in 1819 and stayed there for a little under 200 years.
Broadcasting is immediately north of the top end of Regent Street, and has been used by the
BBC since 1932. Immediately north of Regent Street is the
BBC's headquarters,
Broadcasting House, whose front entrance is in Langham Place. Several national radio stations are broadcast from this building. The site had formerly been a building on the gardens of Foley House designed by
James Wyatt and called Wyatt's House. It was demolished in 1928 (with much of the fixtures ending up in the
Victoria and Albert Museum) to construct Broadcasting House. Construction was challenging because the building had to be visually similar to other properties on Regent Street, yet also contain over twenty
soundproofed studios. The exterior is built of
Portland stone and above the front entrance is a sculpture by
Eric Gill. Broadcasting House was first used by the BBC on 2 May 1932, and total construction costs were £350,000. It was too small for all services, and St George's Hall, next to All Souls, was used for variety broadcasts until it was demolished during
the Blitz. On 15 October 1940, the building took a direct hit, killing seven people, and later that year a landmine exploded on Portland Place, causing widespread fires in Broadcasting House. Despite the damage, it survived the war and became one of the best known buildings associated with radio broadcasting. Subsequently, the BBC expanded with additional studios at
Maida Vale, followed by the former headquarters of
BBC Television,
BBC Television Centre at
Wood Lane. Between 2003 and 2010, Broadcasting House was expanded to include a new wing and modernise the site, replacing earlier extensions. It was designed by
MacCormac Jamieson Prichard. Originally named the Egton House, it was renamed to the
John Peel Wing in 2012, in memory of the radio broadcaster. The
Paris Theatre was located in a converted cinema in Lower Regent Street, near other BBC buildings. Several
rock groups performed live concerts here, including
The Beatles,
Queen and
Pink Floyd, which were simultaneously recorded for broadcast. The BBC stopped using the theatre in 1995.
Education above No. 309 Regent Street The
University of Westminster's main campus is at No. 309 Regent Street. Founded in 1838 under the chairmanship of
George Cayley, it is one of the oldest educational institutions in Central London. It began life as the
Royal Polytechnic Institution (after a royal charter had been formally received in August 1839
Prince Albert became a patron to the institution). The Polytechnic closed in 1881, but was promptly re-founded by
Quintin Hogg as The Polytechnic at Regent Street. In 1970 it was amalgamated with Holborn College of Law, Languages and Commerce to become the
Polytechnic of Central London (PCL), which in turn became the University of Westminster in 1992. The university houses the
Regent Street Cinema which acted as a platform for major scientists, artists and authors such as
Charles Dickens,
John Henry Pepper, and The Lumière Brothers (
Auguste and Louis Lumière) where public and private screenings of Cinématographe were shown to an audience. The cinema was restored and reopened to the public in May 2015.
Other All Souls Church is at the top of Regent Street next to Broadcasting House. It was built in 1823 out of
Bath stone and consecrated in 1824, and is the only surviving building in Regent Street that was designed by John Nash. The
Café Royal, located at 68 Regent Street in the Quadrant, was opened in 1865 by
Daniel Nicols and became an institution of London high society. In 1895
Oscar Wilde argued with
Frank Harris in the café about his proposal to sue the
Marquess of Queensberry for libel over Wilde's alleged homosexuality. Wilde went ahead with the trial, which ultimately led to his own arrest and imprisonment. The present building, by Sir Reginald Blomfield, dates from 1928 and is Grade II listed. It was closed in 2008 and the building which houses the café was bought by a subsidiary of
Alrov Group, as a part of Crown Estate's plans to redevelop this part of Regent Street.
Veeraswamy, London's oldest extant Indian restaurant, has been at 99-101 Regent Street since 1926. ==Events==