Zetland Mews is a Grade II listed building in the Redcar and Cleveland local planning authority area, England. First listed on 15 October 1984. Mews. 43 related planning applications.

Zetland Mews

WRENN ID
final-soffit-nightshade
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Redcar and Cleveland
Country
England
Date first listed
15 October 1984
Type
Mews
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Zetland Mews is a stable block with associated living accommodation, originally part of the larger Zetland Hotel complex. Constructed around 1861 by William Peachey for the Stockton and Darlington Railway Company, it was later converted to residential use in 1985. The building is constructed of white Pease brick with a chamfered plinth and ashlar dressings, and has a roof of Welsh slate with a grey tile ridge and brick chimneys.

The exterior is two storeys and eleven bays, with a seventeen-window range to the rear elevation. The Milton Street façade features a blank arcade with tall pilasters and eleven brick arches. Most arches are blocked, but contain inserted panel doors with 2-light overlights beneath segmental brick arches in bays 1, 4, 9, and 11. Further 4-pane sashes are in the remaining arches, and mullioned lucarnes are positioned above arches 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10. Small round windows within stone surrounds are found in the arch spandrels, and a brick Lombard frieze supports a dogtooth eaves gutter cornice. The hipped roof is punctuated by four 20th-century skylights and four ridge chimneys with brick plinths and cornices. The rear elevation features a central three-bay projection under a gable, with segmental brick arches framing 20th-century recessed doors and 4-pane sashes. A wider central opening on the ground floor provides access and a window above with mullioned sashes under a high segmental head, flanked by round-headed sashes. Wide segmental arches at each end have boarded heads over half-glazed screens. The rear roof also contains four skylights.

The interior of the building was not inspected during the listing process. Before the Zetland Hotel’s opening in 1863, the building was used for initial religious services in the new town of Saltburn. The conversion was undertaken by Napper-Collerton for the Cleveland Building Preservation Trust.

Detailed Attributes

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