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(listed as Marlborough Street) £180 £90 £2,480,000 W1: There is no actual Marlborough Street in this part of London; the square on the board was misnamed after the Marlborough Street Magistrates Court. [26] Vine Street: £200 £100 £1,700,000 W1: The shortest street on the board; it is 70 feet (21 m) long.
Vine Street £200: MONOPOLY: Regent Street £300: Marlborough Street £180: Oxford Street £300: Community Chest: Community Chest: Bow Street £180: Bond Street £320: Marylebone station £200: Liverpool Street station £200: Northumberland Avenue £160: Chance?
Park Lane is the second most valuable property in the London edition of the board game Monopoly. The street had a prestigious social status when the British version of the Monopoly board was first produced, in 1936. On the board, Park Lane forms a pair with Mayfair, the most expensive property in the game.
The street is a square on the British Monopoly board, forming a set with Leicester Square and Coventry Street. [74] When a European Union version of the game was produced in 1992, Piccadilly was one of three London streets selected, along with Oxford Street and Park Lane. [75]
The British version of the board game Monopoly features locations in London and is the standard board in the UK and several Commonwealth countries. The places have become familiar to millions around the world and tourists to the capital try to visit them specifically, while locals attempt pub crawls involving all the locations.
[6] [3] John Rocque's Map of London, 1746 shows Vine Street extending from Piccadilly northeast to Warwick Street. In 1720, the main properties on the street were a brewery and a carpenter's yard. [5] Around 1751–52, a court house was built at the western end of the street, on the corner of what is now Piccadilly Place.
Pall Mall is part of a group of three squares on the British Monopoly board game, alongside Whitehall and Northumberland Avenue. All three streets converge at Trafalgar Square. [37] Rising house prices across London mean a small flat on Pall Mall, which is in the lowest-priced third of properties on the board, now sells for over £1 million. [38]
Bond Street is also a square on the British Monopoly board and is the most expensive of the green-coloured set that also includes Regent and Oxford Streets. The three streets are grouped together because of their shared retail history. [43]