Lodge St Andrew'S Court House Vicarage Wall And Gatepiers To Garden Of Number 7 (St Andrew'S Court House) And Vicarage is a Grade II listed building in the City of London local planning authority area, England. First listed on 10 November 1977. Court house, vicarage, lodge. 1 related planning application.
Lodge St Andrew'S Court House Vicarage Wall And Gatepiers To Garden Of Number 7 (St Andrew'S Court House) And Vicarage
- WRENN ID
- ghost-mortar-crow
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- City of London
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 10 November 1977
- Type
- Court house, vicarage, lodge
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
St Andrew's Court House and Vicarage, located on St Andrew Street, was built in 1870 by the architect Teulon. The Court House is designed in a Gothic style, constructed from yellow stock brick with stone dressings and purple brick relieving arches above the windows. It features a slated roof and has a courtyard elevation of two storeys above a basement, divided into four bays by prominent buttresses. The ground floor has three-light mullioned and transomed windows, while the first floor boasts large windows with transoms and bars. A projecting stair wing with a rounded end includes small trefoil-headed windows and a steep conical slated roof. The street-facing gable has a broken roofline and a door set beneath a pointed arch, with a niche in the gable containing a stone statue of St Andrew.
The Vicarage has a courtyard elevation of two storeys plus an attic and basement, with an irregular frontage that includes gables, dormers, and canted bay windows, all featuring mullioned and transomed windows. The facade turns 90 degrees with a diagonal corner bay that has a gabled brick porch supported by painted stone arches on red sandstone shafts. The Shoe Lane frontage is characterized by irregular fenestration, brick dormers, and gables. The Lodge is a single-storey structure made of stock brick, topped with a slated roof and a large central chimney stack on the ridge. The wall along St Andrew Street is also constructed of stock brick and includes two pairs of gate piers with stone caps.
More on this building
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- Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
- No sale records on file
- Related listed building consents — 1 application
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.
Nearby listed buildings
- Church of St Andrew
- The City Temple
- 54, FARRINGDON STREET EC1 (See details for further address information)
- Bridge or Viaduct Over Farringdon Street
- Statue of the Prince Consort
- Porters Lodge at Entrance and Attached Gates, Standards and Spur Stones
- 5, Hatton Garden
- Numbers 7, 8 and 9 and Attached Railings and Lamp Holder
- Ye Olde Mitre Public House
- 13 and 14 Ely Place and attached railings