Three builders undertook the construction of the range of houses on the east side. Nos. 2-8 had shorter gardens than the rest. They were granted by T W Budd to the builder, James Hall, in 1850. The rest of the range, from Nos. 10 to 44, were built by John Maidlow, a builder from St John's Wood in about 1850. The very end house was built on land owned by Robert Hall and that plot was taken in 1852 by Francis Radford.
George Treadaway, a Paddington draper, built most of the west range. He took leases of Nos. 15 and 17 from J W Ladbroke in 1847, and leases of Nos. 23-33 from TW Budd, the adjoining landowner, in 1849. For some reason, John Lawrence, a St Pancras carpenter, took No. 21, the house in the middle of Treadaway’s two ranges in 1847. James Herd of Paddington built the houses on either side of the Dawson Place junction, Nos. 51-69.
