Queen Annes Lodge And Attached Gates To North West Corner is a Grade II listed building in the Barnsley local planning authority area, England. First listed on 4 December 1986. A C18 Lodge. 5 related planning applications.
Queen Annes Lodge And Attached Gates To North West Corner
- WRENN ID
- tenth-plinth-hawk
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Barnsley
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 4 December 1986
- Type
- Lodge
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Queen Anne’s Lodge and the attached gates are likely from around 1734, coinciding with the date of the nearby Queen Anne's Obelisk, and have been altered and extended to maintain a consistent style. The lodge is constructed from rubble sandstone with a stone slate roof. It is a single-story, rectangular building with a twin-roofed design. A lower addition is set at an angle against the south-west corner.
The side of the lodge facing the former drive towards the obelisk features a small 16-pane sash window flanked by paired pointed-arched windows with casements and glazing bars. The roof is hipped with a ridge stack. Each return side has a blocked doorway and an ogee-headed window with a casement. A matching parallel range, built later, has an ogee-headed window at one end. The side elevation of this range serves as the entrance front, featuring a part-glazed door flanked by sash windows with glazing bars.
The gates are accompanied by tooled, monolithic stone piers with shaped heads. They are wrought iron, with wave-pattern bars, scrolled side panels, and a finialled top rail.
Detailed Attributes
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