Group    From 1810 

Heal's furniture store

John Harris Heal established a feather dressing business at 33 Rathbone Place, moving to Tottenham Court Road in 1818. This became a family business selling beds and moved to larger premises in the same street at numbers 193-9, previously Millers Stables, with Cappers Farm behind where the family lived. This is the site now occupied by the middle part of the current Heal's complex. 1854 these premises were reconstructed as a purpose-built shop designed by James Morant Lockyer (see picture). Ambrose Heal junior joined the firm in 1893 as a furniture designer and went on to run the company very successfully. In 1983 the business was sold to Terence Conran.

The two plaques refer to two developments the first (1917) of which replaced the 1854 building. The main Tottenham Court Road elevation looks like two buildings - Heal's to the south, and Habitat to the north - but it was erected in 3 phases. The north half (5 bays) of the southern building is 1914-17 by Cecil C. Brewer and A. Dunbar Smith. This replaced the 1854 building in the photo. The southern equal-sized extension with a near-identical facade is 1936-8 by Edward Maufe. The northern Habitat building (8 bays), complementary in design, is 1961-2 by Fitzroy Robinson and Partners. It was this last building that required the demolition of the Apollo Inn.

Londonist's 7 Secrets Of Heal's Furniture Store is worth a read.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Heal's furniture store

Commemorated ati

Heals - north

On the north-most pier of the southern building.

Read More

Heals - south

This plaque is on the last but one southern pier of the southern building. 

Read More

Other Subjects

Mather and Smither
1 memorial
Janet James

Janet James

Mosaic/ceramic artist, active c. 2005.

Person, Craft / Design

1 memorial
Jigna Patel

Jigna Patel

Mosaic/ceramic artist, active c. 2005.

Person, Craft / Design

1 memorial
Jacqueline Howell

Jacqueline Howell

Mosaic/ceramic artist, active c. 2005.

Person, Craft / Design

1 memorial
E. J. Parlanti

E. J. Parlanti

Bronze founder. Ercole Felipo Giacomo Parlanti was born in Rome. He and his older brother Alessandro worked at the Nelli foundry in Rome before moving to London. After his arrival in the UK he used...

Person, Craft / Design, Italy

14 memorials

Previously viewed

World War 1

World War 1

We'd always assumed that this war was known as the Great War until WW2 came along at which point it was renamed as World War One or the First World War. But the term was first used in print in 1920...

Event, Armed Forces, Tragedy

403 memorials
Queen Elizabeth II

Queen Elizabeth II

Born 17 Bruton Street, to the Duke and Duchess of York. For information on where she was brought up see Byron Statue. When she was 10 her father became King George VI (on the abdication of his brot...

Person, Royalty, Seriously Famous

126 memorials
Bermondsey civil defence services

Bermondsey civil defence services

Members of the civil defence services who lost their lives in Bermondsey 1939 - 1945.

Group

1 memorial
Mary Kingsley

Mary Kingsley

Traveller and ethnologist. Born Islington as Mary Henrietta Kingsley. Only after the death of her parents could she fulfil her aspirations of travel. Her first book, "Travels in West Africa", publi...

Person, Exploring, Africa

1 memorial
London County Council

London County Council

Prior to the LCC London matters were run by church parishes. The LCC was the first directly elected strategic local government body for London. Replaced by the Greater London Council, covering a la...

Group, Politics & Administration

290 memorials