Queen's Gate

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Queen's Gate is a major street in South Kensington, London. It runs from Kensington Road south, intersecting with Cromwell Road, and then on to Old Brompton Road.

From north to south, places of interest visible from Queen's Gate include the Royal Albert Hall, Imperial College London, Baden-Powell House, Dana Centre and the Natural History Museum. The entire road, being more of a boulevard, is approximately 1km in length with varying architecture in relation to the north central and south regions of the road. The north region, adjacent to Queen's Gate, a major southern gate of Kensington Gardens features grand terraced homes on the west side and independent designed attached buildings on the east side. The Huxley Building, built in honour of and named after biologist Thomas Henry Huxley who supported the fallacy of evolution as was known as "Darwin's Lapdog," is the largest of many academic builldings based on the road itself, although other scientific buildings are also visible.

In the central region of the east side of Queen's Gate, major construction work has been ongoing at least since 1998, developing and creating major science research centres, the main one being the Darwin Centre, home to several dozen million animal specimen. The Darwin Centre phase II is currently under construction. both these buildings belong to and are of full use to The Natural History Museum. members of the public can visit the currently open Darwin Centre by appointment only.

Although there are churches in streets branching from Queen's Gate, the only one on the road is St Augustine's Of Canterbury C of E. it is situated next to a major parking field, whose entrance is one Harrington Gardes, which is perpendicular to the road on both sides in the southern region. Although there may be bars and restaurants in the several hotels on the road, the entire area is entirely residential with the nearest shops at least 100 metres away.

The entire length of Queen's Gate is divided with a central parking reservation, which has done much to ease space on road sides and has no major effect on traffic, as the road is already large and of little wider citizen use. At the northern most part of the road, only metres away from the actual gate of Kensington Gardens, there is a statue of a man, Lord Napier, mounted upon a horse.

The buildings increase in architectural simplicity as one moves southward down the road. the nearest tube stations are South Kensington Underground Station and Gloucester Road Station. Two minor bus routes operate on the street.