Belgravia, Harare

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Belgravia is a mixed use residential suburb in the north of Harare, Zimbabwe. It is named for the eponymous commercial area of Belgravia in London. It is bounded by the larger neighbourhoods of Milton Park, Avondale and Kensington, to the south and northwest respectively, as well as Alexandra Park to the east. The suburb is can be considered a transitionary area between inner city districts like Milton Park and the leafier suburbs to the north.[1]

It is home to a number of commercial businesses and governmental organizations along with the nearby Causeway district in the CBD. It is frequently referred to as part of the city's embassy row.[1]

When Harare was founded in the early 1890s, the Belgravia area, was largely undeveloped because it lay beyond what is now the A1 highway and thus outside the city limits, which began to be subdivided for urban development. It was only in 1902, that the original tract of land- Avondale farm- was subdivided for residential settlement thus becoming the city's first residential suburb. The area of Avondale farm now comprises Avondale, Belgravia and Kensington.[2]

Gentrification and a general commercialisation of the area accelerated in the 1980s and 1990s, driven by businesses moving out from the congested city centre and today the area is now a more mainstream and trendy location with offices, cafes, restaurants, bars, and retail stores, though many leafy residential areas remain.[1]

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