St Peter'S Vicarage is a Grade II listed building in the Birmingham local planning authority area, England. First listed on 3 April 2000. Vicarage.

St Peter'S Vicarage

WRENN ID
tired-timber-honey
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Birmingham
Country
England
Date first listed
3 April 2000
Type
Vicarage
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

St. Peter's Vicarage is a vicarage built in 1911 by C.E. Bateman of Bateman and Bateman. It is constructed of English bond red brick with rusticated brick quoins and features a clay plain tile hipped roof with a moulded brick modillion eaves cornice. The building has tall brick axial stacks adorned with round-arch panels and moulded brick cornices.

The vicarage has a rectangular plan, with the main rooms located on the southwest garden front and the entrance on the northwest side. It is designed in the Queen Anne Domestic Revival style and stands two storeys high with an attic. The symmetrical three-bay southwest garden front includes three large two-storey semi-circular bays featuring tall sashes in exposed cases with glazing bars. Between the bays are oculi, with the first-floor oculi being blind. There are four pedimented dormers with casements that have leaded panes.

On the northwest return, there are two similar sashes on the first floor to the left, accompanied by a round-arch doorway below that has a moulded brick hood, panelled and glazed double doors, and a semi-circular fanlight with leaded panes. The southeast side has two similar sashes on both floors to the right, along with a panelled door to the left that has a rectangular overlight. A single-storey range is located at the rear of the building. The side and rear elevations also feature pedimented dormers similar to those at the front.

Inside, the vicarage has a plaster vaulted entrance hall and an open-well staircase with a moulded string, turned balusters, and a moulded handrail that ramps up to square newels; the balustrade on the lower flight has been removed. The interior includes various chimneypieces, some featuring eared architraves, pulvinated friezes, and overmantels, along with panelled doors and cupboards.

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