Church Of St Andrew Evangelical Church is a Grade II* listed building in the York local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 June 1954. A C15 Church.
Church Of St Andrew Evangelical Church
- WRENN ID
- cold-ledge-bramble
- Grade
- II*
- Local Planning Authority
- York
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 14 June 1954
- Type
- Church
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Church of St Andrew, now a non-denominational church, was originally a parish church. It features a 15th-century nave with an early 19th-century extension built on the site of a late 14th-century former chancel, and it underwent renovations in the 20th century. The building is constructed from reused Roman gritstone and magnesian limestone, with areas of brick blocking. The structure has been rebuilt and patched with various types of brick, primarily in stretcher or random bond, and is topped with a pantile roof that includes half-hipped dormers on both sides of the chancel extension.
The church has a four-bay nave and chancel, along with a west bell turret. The former chancel sits on a chamfered plinth. The east end features a blocked doorway on the south side and two 12-pane windows with painted stone sills. On the north side, there is an original window opening with splayed reveals that now contains a 16-pane sash window. The south side has a 20th-century door and two windows. The nave has a moulded plinth, and on the north side, there are two square-headed windows with decayed hoodmoulds, each consisting of two cinquefoiled lights with mouchette tracery in the head; one window is partially original while the other has been completely renewed. Towards the west end, there is a blocked doorway in a chamfered two-centred arch, which has been filled with brick. The openings on the south side have been significantly altered, featuring 20th-century windows and a door beneath a timber lintel. The west end includes a 20th-century cross window set in a rebuilt gable, above a blocked former window.
The interior has not been inspected, but records indicate the presence of original tie beams in the roof and remnants of a timber-framed bell turret at the west end. The Church of St Andrew was first mentioned in 1194 and became redundant by 1586, when it was united with St Saviour's parish. It has since been used for various secular purposes until the late 20th century.
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