Chapel of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, Chigwell Convent is a Grade II listed building in the Epping Forest local planning authority area, England. First listed on 19 June 2020. Chapel.
Chapel of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, Chigwell Convent
- WRENN ID
- graven-terrace-vale
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Epping Forest
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 19 June 2020
- Type
- Chapel
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Chapel of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, Chigwell Convent
This Edwardian chapel was built in 1910 to 1911 by Leonard Stokes to serve the Roman Catholic Convent of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary and its associated school. An extension of one bay was added in 1925. The choir and sanctuary were reordered between 1968 and 1970 by Weightman & Bullen of Liverpool, and in 1995 a small link building by White & Mileson was added.
Materials and Construction
The chapel is constructed of red brick in Flemish bond with limestone dressings and Welsh slate to the principal roofs.
Plan and Layout
The chapel separates its two original constituent communities: the members of the convent and the boys of the associated school. The sisters' choir runs north-south and the boys' chapel runs east-west. They join at the corner of an L-shaped plan with the same sanctuary for both wings of the building focused at the south-west of the site.
Access to the boys' chapel is at the north and south side of the easternmost bay, leading into a narthex beneath the organ gallery. From the convent, access is via a winding corridor that passes a shrine or oratory at the bottom of a flight of steps, rises up past cloakrooms and WCs for the sisters, and a vestibule which leads into the west side of the northernmost bay of the choir. On the other side of the vestibule is a pair of doors leading to the plain cubicles of a post-war confessional. A run of three sacristies can either be accessed from the sanctuary or directly from the outside.
Exterior
The north elevation of the boys' chapel is four bays long and, in common with the rest of the building, has a classically moulded limestone string course and cornice. The easternmost bay provides the point of access. The upper part of this bay projects outwards by the thickness of one brick and features a brickwork apron. The same bay at ground floor has a projecting porch containing a pair of wooden three-panelled doors in a deep classical architrave beneath a pulvinated frieze broken by a rectangular tablet, and projecting cornice. The jambs of the door surround each have an incised circular consecration cross. The three western bays of the north elevation have windows with semi-circular heads within lugged stone surrounds. The windows are surmounted by keystones and projecting hood moulds. Between the bottom of the glazing and the stone sill is a plain brick panel.
The eastern elevation of the boys' chapel is gabled with two brick pilasters at each end. The upper part of the gable is conceived as a broken pediment. The pitch of the roof is interrupted by the pilasters and a small hipped section carries the eaves to the outer walls. There are limestone bands at the upper levels, a Diocletian window beneath eaves height, and underneath the window is a canted bay containing the stairs to the organ loft. At the base of the canted bay is a foundation stone with a Latin inscription dedicating the building to the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary and giving the date 18 October 1910.
The south elevation of the boys' chapel mirrors precisely that of the north and connects with a gabled bay between two pilasters that is the south elevation of the sanctuary. As with the eastern gable, the upper levels include banded masonry in the form of a broken pediment and a Diocletian window in a stone surround which intersects with the base of the pediment.
The west elevation of the sanctuary has a narrower gable and repeats the banded limestone and the broken pediment motif without any windows. Hipped eaves have been covered in Westmoreland slate. The apex of the roof is surmounted by a small chimney. At ground floor level the sanctuary and the adjoining bays of the sisters' choir are concealed behind the projecting flat-roofed sacristies, oratory and link buildings connecting the chapel to the convent proper. The sacristies have high quality Flemish bond brickwork, six windows in total, and a single door towards the southern end. Adjacent to that door is a rainwater hopper of Edwardian Baroque design. The east wall of the oratory includes an elaborately detailed Baroque window surround within several planes of projecting brickwork. The limestone surround has a semi-circular head with a large keystone at its centre, and the jambs and architrave are interrupted by limestone blocks which extend out to the ends of the wall surface. At the upper levels the four bays of the sisters' choir are indicated by tall segmental headed windows in stone surrounds with keystones and hood moulds.
The north elevation of the sisters' choir is again gabled and reproduces the broken pediment with banded masonry though without any pilasters. A Diocletian window beneath the banded masonry is the only other ornament. The plain exterior wall of the corridor and confessional connects the chapel back to the convent.
The east wall of the sisters' choir contains four windows in stone surrounds with segmental heads, keystones and hood moulds with small brick panels between the base of the window and the stone sill as found on the west side. The string course ends after the northernmost window, indicating the point at which the chapel was extended to the north in around 1925.
In the angle between the north wall of the boys' chapel and the east wall of the sisters' choir is a square, flat-roofed link structure. Its external elevations each have a single square window in a lugged stone surround with plain frieze and cornice.
Interior
The principal interior spaces are the sisters' choir and boys' chapel with their combined sanctuary, and the oratory or shrine located alongside the ancillary spaces west of the choir. The oratory has the form of a single-celled polygonal apse with a domed ceiling, and a lantern with decorative leaded glazing. The floor, skirting, altar and tabernacle are in white and green marbles. The oratory is separated from the corridor by a non-original decorated archway supported on fibreglass columns with decorative non-Classical capitals.
The sisters' choir is four and a half bays long beneath a plastered barrel vault featuring round transverse arches with gilt mouldings. There are four segmental headed windows to each long elevation and a Diocletian window at the north end. Beneath the windows the walls are panelled in blonde oak with minimal detailing, a broad flat dado rail and continued panelling to the ground. Three stepped ranks of choir stalls to either side of a central walkway are laid out in collegiate fashion. The stalls date from 1968 to 1970 and are modernist in style. The seats lift in the style of medieval misericords, and each one has been moulded on the south side to allow the occupant to turn to face the altar whilst seated. Between each seat is an armrest with a hinged top, within which books can be stored. At the southern end of the choir, stalls have been removed to allow access to the link into the boys' chapel. The sanctuary arch, up two steps, rests on paired Ionic columns with gilded capitals and mouldings.
The boys' chapel is three bays long with an eastern bay occupied by a narthex and organ gallery. A plaster barrel vault runs along its length with gilded transverse arches. The seating is in two rows of plain pews with un-decorated bench ends. The organ gallery rests on two Tuscan columns and the organ itself is divided in two at either end of the gallery. At the rear of the narthex, adjacent to each entrance, is an aedicule of decorative marbles, and a holy water stoup. Between them is a wooden screen of four arches containing entrances to the two plain confessionals, the stair to the organ loft, and a noticeboard. At the opposite end the sanctuary arch is supported on square columns with marble altars at their base, dedicated to the Virgin Mary on the left and St Joseph to the right.
The sanctuary at the intersection of the two wings of the chapel has a domed plaster ceiling decorated in powder blue with gilt stairs and the figure of the Holy Spirit as a dove in a sunburst at the centre of a gilt circular moulding. Ionic columns support each corner of the ceiling. The west and south walls, the floors, altar, tabernacle, lectern and Priest's chair are all covered in various marbles. The west wall, above the Priest's chair and the liturgical focus of the boys' chapel, features a stylised opus sectile figure of Christ bearing the badge of the Sacred Heart on his chest. The priest's chair, beneath this, is of three large marble blocks with leather tops, and a tall oak back. The south wall, the termination of the sisters' choir, has a Diocletian window with stained glass and wall surfaces of decorative marble. Set into the lower part of the wall is a vertical aedicule for the tabernacle, framed in gold mosaic tile. The tabernacle stands on a plinth of fine white marble. The plinth has a carving of a cross and a fish at its base, and a Eucharistic chalice and wafer within a recess in the middle. The door of the tabernacle is embossed with a Pelican in Piety. The altar is of perfectly square white marble. Its base is a cube with a dark marble X on each front, against a gold mosaic background, at the centre of which is a Chi-Rho on each side. The altar stands at the centre of radiating pattern marble segments in the sanctuary floor encircled by a yellow marble nimbus.
Stained Glass
Earley and Co's stained glass features in every window, most of which places older figurative glass against abstract modernist backgrounds. Notable figures of entirely post-war glass include a figure of Christ on the south wall of the boys' chapel, adjacent to the sanctuary, and the Crucifixion shown in the Diocletian window facing the sisters' choir.
Detailed Attributes
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