Katana VentraIP

10 Downing Street

10 Downing Street, SW1A 2AA

14 January 1970

1210759[1]

1682 (1682)

1684 (1684)

Colloquially known as Number 10, the building is in Downing Street, just off Whitehall, in the City of Westminster, London. It is over 300 years old, is Grade I listed,[1] and contains approximately 100 rooms. A private residence for the prime minister occupies the third floor and there is a kitchen in the basement. The other floors contain offices and conference, reception, sitting and dining rooms where the prime minister works, and where government ministers, national leaders and foreign dignitaries are met and hosted. At the rear is an interior courtyard and a terrace overlooking a 12-acre (0.2 ha) garden. Adjacent to St James's Park, Number 10 is approximately 34 mile (1.2 km) from Buckingham Palace, the London residence of the British monarch, and near the Palace of Westminster, the meeting place of both Houses of Parliament.


Originally three houses, Number 10 was offered to Robert Walpole by King George II in 1732.[3] Walpole accepted on the condition that the gift was to the office of First Lord of the Treasury. The post of First Lord of the Treasury has, for much of the 18th and 19th centuries and invariably since 1905, been held by the prime minister. Walpole commissioned William Kent to join the three houses and it is this larger house that is known as Number 10 Downing Street.


Despite its size and convenient location near to Parliament, few early prime ministers lived at 10 Downing Street. Costly to maintain, neglected, and run-down, Number 10 was scheduled to be demolished several times, but the property survived and became linked with many statesmen and events in British history. In 1985, Margaret Thatcher said Number 10 had become "one of the most precious jewels in the national heritage".[4]


The Prime Minister's Office, for which the terms Downing Street and Number 10 are metonymous, lies within the 10 Downing Street building and is part of the Cabinet Office.[5] It is staffed by a mix of career civil servants and special advisers.


10 Downing Street is Government property. Its registered legal title is held in the name of the Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, and the secretary of state is a corporation sole.[6]

History of the building[edit]

Original Number 10[edit]

Number 10 Downing Street was originally three properties: a mansion overlooking St James's Park called "the House at the Back", a town house behind it and a cottage. The town house, from which the modern building gets its name, was one of several built by George Downing between 1682 and 1684.


Downing, a notorious spy for Oliver Cromwell and later Charles II, invested in property and acquired considerable wealth.[7] In 1654, he purchased the lease on land south of St James's Park, adjacent to the House at the Back within walking distance of parliament. Downing planned to build a row of terraced town houses "for persons of good quality to inhabit in ..."[8] The street on which he built them now bears his name, and the largest became part of Number 10 Downing Street.[9]

10 Downing Street today[edit]

The current Prime Minister is Rishi Sunak. 10 Downing Street houses the UK Cabinet Room in which Cabinet meetings take place, chaired by the Prime Minister. It also houses the Prime Minister's Executive Office, which deals with government logistics and diplomacy.[88]

10 Downing Street lecterns

10 Downing Street Guard Chairs

– the prime minister's official country residence

Chequers

– a cat employed as the Chief Mouser to the Cabinet Office at 10 Downing Street

Larry

List of residents of 10 Downing Street

Official residence

Bolitho, Hector (1957). No. 10 Downing Street: 1660–1900. Hutchinson.  1712032.

OCLC

Blick, Andrew and Jones, George (2010). Premiership: The Development, Nature and Power of the Office of the British Prime Minister, Imprint Academic,  9781845401689

ISBN

Feely, Terence (1982). No. 10: The Private Lives of Six Prime Ministers. Sidgwick and Jackson.  978-0-283-98893-6.

ISBN

Holmes, Richard (2009). Churchill's Bunker: The Secret Headquarters at the Heart of Britain's Victory. Profile Books.  449854872.

OCLC

Jones, Christopher (1985). . The Leisure Circle. ISBN 978-0-563-20441-1.

No. 10 Downing Street: The Story of a House

Minney, R.J. (1963). No. 10 Downing Street: A House in History. Boston: Little, Brown and Company.  815822725.

OCLC

Seldon, Anthony (1999). No. 10 Downing Street: The Illustrated History. London: HarperCollins Illustrated.  978-0-00-414073-5.

ISBN

Smith, Goldwin (1990). A Constitutional and Legal History of England. New York: Dorset Press.  498777.

OCLC

Official website

Photos from the Prime Minister's Office

10 Downing Street

Survey of London

on Facebook

10 Downing Street

Virtual tour of seven Downing Street rooms and the garden.

Virtual Tour