Two days is enough to understand why Belgravia rewards staying rather than just passing through. Here’s an itinerary built around what’s genuinely walkable from Pimlico Road — design houses, a Saturday market, world-class art, and some of the best new restaurants in this part of London.

Day One: Pimlico Road and the Belgravia Walk

Morning

Start at Daylesford Organic, right next door to The Bourne, for breakfast — or walk a few minutes further to The Orange on Pimlico Road for a more substantial brunch in their conservatory. Either way, you’re starting the day exactly where you’re staying.

Daylesford Organic Next Door
Organic farmshop & café 0 min walk

Right next to The Bourne — the easiest possible start to the day. Organic, seasonal, and the granola is worth the trip on its own.

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The Orange
Gastropub brunch 3 min walk

A more substantial start — a handsome four-floor pub with a conservatory, serious brunch, and a roof terrace for later in the day.

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Late Morning 

Walk the length of Pimlico Road itself, past Colefax & Fowler, Linley, and Rose Uniacke — even if you’re not furnishing a house, the window-shopping is genuinely worthwhile. If it’s a Saturday, time this for Orange Square’s farmers’ market, a minute from the apartment, where a bronze Mozart has quietly watched over the stalls for decades.

Pimlico Road Design Houses
Antiques & interiors 2 min walk

Colefax & Fowler, Linley, Rose Uniacke — even without a project in mind, the window-shopping along this stretch is genuinely worthwhile.

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Orange Square Market Nestor Pick
Saturday market 1 min walk

A small farmers’ market every Saturday, watched over by a bronze statue of an eight-year-old Mozart. A genuinely lovely, low-key London moment.

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Afternoon

Head towards Sloane Square, five minutes on foot, then continue to the King’s Road, twelve minutes away — independent shops, good cafés, and the kind of unhurried wandering that doesn’t need a plan. The Saatchi Gallery on Duke of York Square is free and consistently well-programmed, a good stop if the day calls for something more considered.

Sloane Square
Shopping 5 min walk

Close enough to feel like an extension of your own street rather than a destination requiring planning.

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King’s Road
Shopping 12 min walk

Independent shops, good cafés, and the kind of unhurried wandering that doesn’t need a plan.

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Saatchi Gallery
Contemporary art 15 min walk

Free, well-programmed contemporary art on Duke of York Square — a good stop if the afternoon calls for something more considered.

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Evening

Dinner at La Poule au Pot, a short walk from the apartment, for proper French bistro cooking in a candlelit room — or book ahead at Cornucopia by Clare Smyth on Holbein Place for something more special. Either way, you’ll be home in minutes.

La Poule au Pot
French bistro 4 min walk

A Belgravia institution since 1964, opposite Orange Square. Candlelit, romantic, and exactly the right note to end the first day on.

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Corenucopia by Clare Smyth Nestor Pick
Michelin-starred bistro 6 min walk

For something more special — Clare Smyth’s relaxed, Michelin-starred follow-up to her three-starred Core. Book well ahead.

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Day Two: Tate Britain and the Newer Belgravia

Morning

Walk towards Tate Britain along Millbank — the world’s greatest collection of British art, and consistently less crowded than its Tate Modern counterpart. Turner, Hockney, Hogarth, Bacon, Freud: all here, all free to view, with no queue worth mentioning on a weekday morning.

Tate Britain
Art gallery 10 min walk

The world’s greatest collection of British art. Free entry, no real queue on a weekday morning — Turner, Hockney, Hogarth, Bacon, Freud all here.

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Midday

Lunch at Lorne on Wilton Road — Michelin-listed, Good Food Guide-approved, and still relatively under the radar. The set lunch is excellent value; book ahead if you can.

Lorne
Modern British 12 min walk

Michelin-listed, still under the radar. Chef Graham Brown’s seasonal cooking and an excellent set lunch — book ahead if you can.

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Afternoon

Walk to Eccleston Yards, a development that’s become a genuine destination in its own right. Stop at Weezie’s for thin-crust pizza and a glass of orange wine on the terrace, if the weather’s behaving — walk-ins only, so allow a little patience.

Eccleston Yards
Dining & wine 9 min walk

A genuine destination in its own right — a good indicator of how this corner of Belgravia has quietly modernised.

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Weezie’s
Pizza & wine bar 9 min walk

Thin-crust pizza, orange wine, and a terrace that fills fast on a sunny afternoon. Walk-ins only — allow a little patience.

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Evening

Close out the trip at Wildflowers in Newson’s Yard, just off Pimlico Road — Mediterranean cooking over coals, an open kitchen, and Bar Flor upstairs if you’d rather start with a drink before dinner. Book ahead, particularly at weekends.

Wildflowers & Bar Flor Nestor Pick
Mediterranean dining 3 min walk

Cooked over coals, with an open kitchen — start with a drink at Bar Flor upstairs, then close the trip out properly. Book ahead.

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Getting Around

The Bourne sits within easy walking distance of most of what makes this itinerary work — Sloane Square (5 min), the King’s Road (12 min), and Knightsbridge (20 min) are all genuinely walkable rather than tube-dependent, which is one of the quieter advantages of staying on Pimlico Road. Victoria station, for wider connections, is a short walk or bus ride away.

Plan your stay: view The Bourne’s apartments. For more on the area, read The Bourne Edit: An Honest Guide to Belgravia and Where to Eat in Belgravia.

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