Queens Court Business Centre and attached railings to front is a Grade II listed building in the Barnsley local planning authority area, England. First listed on 13 January 1986. Former hotel, business centre.

Queens Court Business Centre and attached railings to front

WRENN ID
keen-arch-tarn
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Barnsley
Country
England
Date first listed
13 January 1986
Type
Former hotel, business centre
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Queens Court Business Centre and attached railings to front

This former hotel with attached railings, shops and house was built in the late 1860s for James Fox to designs by Wade and Turner. It underwent alterations and additions in the 1870s, early to mid-20th century, and late 20th to early 21st century.

The original building and later additions are constructed in stone with slate roofs. The modern attic storeys on Regent Street and Regent Street South are covered in zinc sheets.

Layout and development

The former hotel stands at the junction of Regent Street and Eldon Street and has a curved outer corner. The elevation on Regent Street is attached to a narrow two-bay infill block added in late 1872 and an L-shaped building from 1872 beyond it. This L-shaped building originally contained cellars linked to the hotel, ground-floor shops and a first-floor billiard room with a rear store and warehouse range on the west side of the hotel yard. All these buildings are now offices. The yard is enclosed by an 1873-1874 infill block fronting Regent Street South with a covered archway to the yard at the west end.

Exterior

The building is designed in a classical style and the main elevations are constructed in ashlar stone.

The principal building is of three storeys with an attic and a basement. It has seven bays to Regent Street, three rounded corner bays at the junction of Regent Street and Eldon Street, and three bays on Eldon Street. The Regent Street elevation abuts the three-storey, two-bay infill block and the three-storey, three-bay shop and former billiard room building. The Eldon Street elevation courses through to the lower, three-storey, two-bay shop and house, which was part of the original design.

Each end of the former hotel's seven Regent Street bays and the three Eldon Street bays are marked by pilasters, which also separate the three rounded-corner bays from the two street elevations. The pilasters have differing capitals on each floor. The first-floor pilasters are particularly decorative with fielded panelling and roundels and acanthus leaf capitals. Above is a heavy dentilled eaves cornice with carved heads on paired console brackets and a tall, panelled and balustraded parapet, which is continuous from the outer bay of the Eldon Street elevation to the outer bay of the Regent Street elevation. The eaves cornice to Regent Street South is simpler with paired console brackets and there is no parapet. There are tall decorative stone stacks with wide, moulded cornices.

The Regent Street elevation is symmetrical with the central bay containing the main entrance marked by similar pilasters. The round-arched enriched entrance has three steps up to double doors with fielded panels and glazed lights above and a round-headed overlight with moulded archivolt and a giant keystone with a carved head of Queen Victoria. Large flanking console brackets support a heavy dentilled cornice. On the ground floor, there are three bays to each side of the entrance with round-headed windows with continuous moulded hood moulds and giant keystones with carved heads in cartouches. Bay two has a second doorway beneath a semi-circular window. It has two steps up to double doors with fielded panels and glazed lights above and a rectangular overlight. The other windows all have two-pane horned sashes, as do the first- and second-floor windows. The first-floor windows are square-headed with a decorative sill band. The central window over the main entrance is enriched with garlanded lions-head console brackets supporting a segmental pediment and a balustrade with urns. The other first-floor windows have architraves and enriched heads. The windows in bays two and six have garlanded lions-head console brackets supporting heavy enriched cornices. The second-floor windows are also square-headed with a sill band, architraves and enriched giant keystones. The central window has a round-arched tympanum enriched with two cornucopias. The windows in bays two and six have cornices with round-headed pediments. Set back behind the parapet are three round-headed dormer windows with finials. In front of the narrow basement areas of the hotel on Regent Street are decorative cast-iron railings set on chamfered stone kerbs. The railings are continued in front of the area of the two-bay infill block.

The three rounded-corner bays have similar windows to those on each floor of the Regent Street elevation. The first-floor central window also has a heavy enriched cornice supported on garlanded lions-head console brackets, and the second-floor central window also has a cornice with a round-headed pediment. There appear to be three blocked basement windows with a chamfered stone kerb in front.

The three Eldon Street bays have similar first- and second-floor windows with enrichment to the central windows. The ground floor is surmounted by a dentilled cornice on enriched console brackets topped with carved eagles. It has three round-headed openings, the arches springing from slender cast-iron fluted columns with acanthus leaf capitals. Above are slender continuous hood moulds with lion heads. The round-headed openings contain a doorway in the first bay and two windows.

Abutting the right-hand corner of the building are five additional bays formed by the two-bay infill block and the three-bay shop block. On the ground floor, bays one and two have paired round-headed windows with a continuous arched hood mould with carved head stops. The third bay projects slightly and contains a doorway, originally to access the first-floor billiard room, with double doors with fielded panels and glazed lights above. It has a doorcase of Tuscan pilasters and a deep entablature. Above the entablature is a semi-circular overlight with an arched hood mould. To the right is a round-headed, triple-light window and beyond a round-headed two-light window and outer doorway. They have cast-iron fluted colonettes with foliated capitals standing on a moulded plinth, and rusticated voussoirs. The doorway has double doors with fielded panels and glazed lights, a rectangular overlight with a semi-circular overlight above. The round-headed first-floor windows follow a similar pattern. They have triangular broken pediments and giant keystones. The windows all have two-pane horned sashes, except for the triple-light and two-light ground-floor windows, which have single panes with semi-circular overlights. The later second floor has square-headed windows and the late 20th to early 21st century recessed attic storey has round-headed windows.

The rear former warehouse building faces onto Regent Street South. It is constructed of coursed, shaped stones with horizontal tooling and a moulded stone eaves cornice. The front elevation is of three bays and two storeys raised over a basement. It now has a modern attic storey faced in zinc sheeting. The raised ground floor has a large, round-headed warehouse doorway, now partially infilled and converted to a window. To the left is an inserted doorway replacing a cellar window and a raised ground-floor window; both stone lintels remain. To the right is a barred basement window and a square-headed, ground-floor window. The first floor has three square-headed windows.

To the left of the hotel is the two-bay, three-storey shop and house, part of the original building. The ground floor has a timber shopfront with panelled pilasters with moulded console brackets supporting a panelled fascia. The left-hand doorway has panelled double doors and a semi-circular overlight. The window has a panelled stallriser and a slender central mullion; the rectangular transom windows are presently blind. The first and second floors each have two segmental-arched windows with moulded giant keystones, slightly projecting sills and two-pane horned sash frames.

The side elevation facing onto Regent Street South has irregularly placed windows of differing sizes and a doorway to the left. The doorway and majority of the windows have segmental-arched heads with moulded giant keystones. The window to the right of the present doorway has been converted from a doorway. Between the shop and house and the warehouse is a two-storey block with windows, a doorway, and a covered archway all with segmental-arched heads and giant keystones. The square-headed basement windows have been infilled.

Interior

The building has been refurbished in the early 21st century with the exception of the cellars.

The main entrance from Regent Street opens into a small lobby with a geometric floor of veined grey and black marble, panelled mahogany side walls and a mahogany circular revolving inner door. The ceiling has an enriched cornice and ceiling rose. The entrance and stair hall beyond has an enriched cornice and rose. On the right-hand side, the openings are framed by fluted Ionic pilasters and entablature. To the rear is the open-well main staircase with a shaped curtail step, carved mahogany newel post with acorn finial, swept mahogany handrail, turned wooden balusters and decorative tread ends.

The former main reception rooms on the ground and first floors have differing enriched cornices and ceiling roses and moulded window architraves, with panelling to the reveals and soffits of some of the sash windows. The large round-ended room in the north-east, outer corner of the ground floor has a trabeated ceiling with panelled beams with slender central, cast-iron columns, enriched cornices and a large oval ceiling rose. A similar room on the first floor has an enriched cornice and circular ceiling rose. A long first-floor room overlooking Regent Street South has a coved and corniced ceiling with two decorative, circular ventilation grilles.

The extensive stone-flagged cellars retain fixtures and fittings including stone-topped storage benches and shelves, brick storage bins and wine racks, a large fireplace faced in glazed tiles and a bricked-up brick fireplace with a stone lintel.

Detailed Attributes

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