The bulk of Chelsea, especially the east end more local to Sloane Square, is architecturally and economically similar to
South Kensington,
Belgravia,
St James's, and
Mayfair. The largely retail at ground floor
Kings Road with its design and interior furnishing focus intersects at Sloane Square the residential, neatly
corniced and dressed façades of
Sloane Street leading from the
Victoria Embankment promenade to the small district of
Knightsbridge. On the northern side of the square is the
Sloane Square Hotel. ;Exclusive housing hub Estates on all sides are made up of ornate, luxuriously furnished private apartments set behind railings — a minority of these remain combined to form large townhouses, primarily in amongst those of rows of not more than four storeys. Gothic, classical and
Edwardian architecture mix; the area has grown piecemeal, including in
infill, under strict character and aesthetic demands of local
urban planning. Elements of almost every street were reinstated, in similar style, after the
London Blitz. ;Social analysis In sociology, a small
social class of London has since the 1980s been cast and to some extent
outcast as
Sloane Rangers or Sloanies, relatively young, underemployed and ostentatiously well-off members of the upper classes who linguistically have their own evolving
lexicon, sloane(y) speak, spoken in
received pronunciation. Some are heavily engaged investors in charities, new businesses and the arts, particularly with the influx of and integration with young, wealthy, foreign-born Chelsea residents. The endurance of this class is reflected in an occasional dramatic work or
fly on the wall documentary such as
Made in Chelsea. ==History==