Hurlingham Club Seeking Permission for New Cricket Pavilion


Wants to replace existing 30-year-old facilities


A visualisation of the proposed new pavilion. Picture: Hurlingham Club

January 19, 2026

A highly exclusive private members’ club in Fulham has applied to build a new cricket pavilion to allow disable visitors access and spectators to use the toilet.

The Hurlingham Club said its existing pavilion is more than 30 years old and is no longer “fitting” for patrons, a planning report before Hammersmith and Fulham Council shows.

The sports and social club, which counts the Princess of Wales as a member, wants to replace the run-down structure with a new, wooden building which “draws on traditional cricket pavilion forms” of a pitched roof, deep verandas and crafted timber detailing. It will be 165sqm in size – almost double its current footprint.

The club house is set to provide level access to a clubroom, a servery, umpire changing rooms and toilets. In the winter, it will be used by croquet players with pitches laid out on the cricket ground and provide a resting point for members walking in the grounds.

It will also be used by the Young Hurlingham and Hartbeeps, a kids’ groups run by the club.

The current pavilion is made of two run-down portable cabins which are said to be at the end of their operational life. It has no changing rooms for officials or toilets for spectators. There is no access to less mobile or wheelchair users.

The Hurlingham Club said the pavilion does not meet the “expectation of the club, its members or visitors” or the English Cricket Board (ECB) guidelines and is inaccessible to those with mobility challenges.

The application has been validated by Hammersmith and Fulham Council and is set for a decision. A date has not been given.

According to the application paperwork, the Hurlingham Club is a private social and sports club situated in 42 acres of landscaped grounds near the River Thames. It is recognised as “one of the world’s finest private member clubs” and since opening in 1869, it has offered croquet and tennis lawns, botanical gardens and has a stately Georgian Clubhouse to members. It is considered the birthplace of polo.


The current cricket pavilion at the Hurlingham Club

Grade II Hurlingham House is the main mansion which houses club rooms, restaurants, offices and gym spaces as well as indoor tennis courts, pickleball and padel courts and an indoor pool.

The club’s website says it offers guests the “finest sports and social facilities”, which is somewhat unsurprising given that membership reportedly costs £1,400 per year. It also has a closed membership list, which is reviewed just once a year.

Ben Lynch - Local Democracy Reporter