Lindsey House is a Grade II* listed building in the Kensington and Chelsea local planning authority area, England. First listed on 24 June 1954. House. 16 related planning applications.

Lindsey House

WRENN ID
iron-lancet-storm
Grade
II*
Local Planning Authority
Kensington and Chelsea
Country
England
Date first listed
24 June 1954
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Lindsey House, comprising Nos. 95 to 101 Cheyne Walk, is likely a rebuilding dating from 1674, although it was altered and divided into separate houses in 1775. The building is three storeys high with dormers. Numbers 98 and 100 each have two windows, while No. 98 has three. It is constructed of stucco, with square-headed windows featuring almost flush frames and glazing bars. The roof is tiled and mansard-shaped, with a moulded wood eaves cornice. Bands run at the first and second floor levels. Rusticated quoins are present on Nos. 95, 96, 98 and 100. No. 98 has a finely carved doorcase with a split pediment, alongside cast iron balconies on columns to the first and second floors and a balcony railing above the cornice. No. 100 features a three-window splay bay and a covered entrance on a forecourt redesigned in the late 19th century by George Devey. No. 101, added around 1752 by the Moravian architect Sigismund von Gersdorf, is part of the overall group. A London County Council tablet on No. 96 commemorates the residence of J.A.M. Whistler. No. 98 was associated with Mark and Isambard Brunel.

Detailed Attributes

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