Grosvenor Gardens is the name given to two triangular parks in
Belgravia,
London, faced on their western and eastern sides by streets of the same name. Both roads run roughly north to south from
Hobart Place and
Grosvenor Place to
Buckingham Palace Road, and is entirely the A3215.
The
shell-covered huts in the southern garden were part of a redesign of the park by Jean Moreux, architect-in-chief of the
National Monuments and Palaces of France, in 1952. The
fabrique style buildings are covered with shells from England and France, and are used to store gardening equipment.[2][3]
^Ward-Jackson, Philip (2003), Public Sculpture of the City of London, Public Sculpture of Britain, vol. 7, Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, pp. 53–54,
ISBN0-85323-977-0