The King's Speech was filmed in London in the United Kingdom.
Buckingham Palace (king's office)
In movie
Real
Hatfield House
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Hatfield House was constructed in 1611 for Robert Cecil and has remained in the Cecil family ever since. The house was constructed from the bricks of the former Royal Palace of Hatfield which was mostly torn down to allow its construction. The house is an example of Jacobean architecture and is surrounded by extensive gardens.
Hatfield
The Mall
In movie
Real
Air Raid Shelter
In movie
Real
Scene was shot The Old Royal Naval College, situated in Greenwich on the Thames, is the prominent centerpiece of the area. Originally constructed in 1696 as the Royal Hospital for Seamen, the building passed into the hands of the navy in 1873. In 1998 the site passed into the hands off the Greenwich Foundation and is now open to tourists and filming.
London
Buckingham Palace
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Lancaster House is a neo-classical mansion constructed in 1825 for the Duke of York and Albany designed partially by Sir Robert Smirke before he was replaced by Benjamin Dean Wyatt. The interior wasn't completed until 1840 with the help of a third architect Sir Charles Barry. The house has become a popular stand-in for Buckingham Palace in films and TV playing that role half a dozen times.
London
BBC Wireless Control Room
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Battersea Power Station is a pair of coal power plants constructed between 1929–41 by architects J. Theo Halliday & Giles Gilbert Scott in the brick cathedral style with lavish Art Deco interiors. The stations closed in 1975 and stood vacant for over 35 years as various redevelopment plans fell through. Redevelopment of the site finally began in 2013 with a Malaysian-backed developer and architect Frank Gehry partnered with Foster + Partners to restore the power station into offices primarily housing Apple's largest European offices and add over 4,000 homes to the land surrounding the facility.
London
St. James's Palace
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Draper's Hall is the home of the Worshipful Company of Drapers, one of the original Great Twelve Livery Companies in the City of London founded in 1361. The current hall was constructed on the site of two previous halls lost to the fire and opened in the 1770s designed by architect John Gorham.
London