Former Lambeth County Court is a Grade II listed building in the Lambeth local planning authority area, England. First listed on 10 December 2021. A C20 Court building. 1 related planning application.
Former Lambeth County Court
- WRENN ID
- keen-trefoil-kestrel
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Lambeth
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 10 December 2021
- Type
- Court building
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Former Lambeth County Court
This court building of 1928 was designed by John Hatton Markham of the Office of Works in an eclectic classical style. The building has undergone some internal alterations, and a late 20th century rear extension has been added which is not of special interest and is excluded from the listing.
The front part of the building is constructed of red brick laid in Flemish bond, with Portland stone dressings. The rear part of the original building is of London stock brick. Window openings retain their original metal-framed windows, though with replacement glass. The flat roofs are surfaced with asphalt or felt.
The original building is rectangular on plan, aligned on a west to east axis, with the main frontage facing south. The late 20th century extension to the north is excluded from the listing.
The symmetrical southern frontage is eleven bays wide, consisting of a nine-bay central section containing the principal entrance, with subsidiary entrances in stepped-back sections at either end. The windows on this elevation have double casements below with transom lights above, each section having marginal glazing. The transom lights of the ground-floor windows include an opening section with a central saltire cross. The nine-bay section has stone coping to the parapet, which is stepped up above the entrance. The door surround, together with the window above it, forms a frontispiece, with the balcony resting on and breaking forward from the entablature of the doorway. The stone architrave of the doorway incorporates a band of slate which follows the lugs or extensions at the base of the architrave. The inner door surround is of fluted marble, with spears carved flanking the door and the date '1928' in a cartouche above. This surround introduces both the architrave form and the fluting which feature throughout the interior. The doorway contains original double oak doors with rosette handles. These have short panels above and tall panels below containing elongated raised lozenges, broken by strengthening elements in the form of plinths. Above the doorway is a pulvinated frieze carved with a ribbon binding and with acanthus at the ends, backing a panel carved with 'LAMBETH COUNTY COURT' in Roman letters with residual gilding, above which is a bundle of fasces symbolizing authority. The fasces are framed by blocks supporting the heavy platform of the balcony, which has rusticated piers narrowing slightly upwards to either side of an iron balustrade. On the platform is a moulded plinth which formerly held the royal arms, removed when the building's court function ceased. The flush stone surround of the window behind is Vitruvian, narrowing upwards, its raised edging with a central step at the top. The other bays in the main section are configured identically. In each bay the windows are slightly set back, with vertical brickwork projecting and recessed in alternate courses between the windows. In each bay the ground-floor window opening is without surround but has a heavy stone cill resting on oversized stone corbels, concave below and with a nail-head block above. Between each pair of corbels is a raised brick panel. A metal grille set into the brickwork above each ground-floor window is screened by foliate decoration. Above these are set the blank stone aprons of the first-floor windows, which also serve as exaggerated keystones to the windows below, capped by deep moulded cills which break into the moulded window surrounds above. The ground-floor cills are linked by a stone storey band. A recess in the brickwork just above the bases of the ground-floor corbels creates a gap above the projecting stone plinth, giving the impression that the façade is held up from below by the corbels. Within this recess are ventilation holes beneath the windows. Each subsidiary entrance is framed by a stepped stone surround resting on the storey band and broken by a panel which in the case of the western doorway reads 'JUDGES ENTRANCE'. The panel to the eastern doorway is blank. Above, the stepped section is broken by a tall rectangular light with a cross pattern in the glazing. The first-floor windows in this section are unadorned, with plain stone cills and flat brick arches. Each doorway is approached by renewed stone steps with later handrails. Set back on the roof to the west, but now visible from the street owing to the loss of the buildings opposite, are two original structures, one housing an access stair and the other a water tank, both rendered.
The western elevation is largely obscured by an earlier adjoining building, with blind walls above. The eastern elevation of the front section is blind. Behind, to the east, the rear parts of the original building in stock brick consist of a two-storey set-back section with flat-arched windows, and a lower section behind occupying the north-east corner of the original building, representing the Registrar's Court, which is lit from the north by four tall windows with round-headed brick arches containing metal-framed windows with multiple marginal lights and radiating lights to the heads. The north-west corner of the building is filled by a full-height block, the upper storey occupied by the Judge's Court, again lit from the north by four windows as in the Registrar's Court. The ground floor of this part of the building, which formerly contained flat-arched windows, is now obscured by the excluded extension, as is the central part of the original building, which according to the 1928 plans contained a rear entrance with an elongated fanlight to the west and a variety of flat-arched windows.
The capitalized room names given here are taken from the 1928 plans. Later signage reflects the changing use of the spaces. The building's arrangement reflects its original use. There are central public halls on ground and first floors linked by a public stair, providing access to the Registrar's Court on the ground floor and the Judge's Court on the first floor, and separate entrances for the officials associated with the two courts, as well as adjacent rooms ancillary to each. The former Cash Office area was to the west on the ground floor, with associated offices.
The principal entrance leads into a wide shallow Vestibule, separated from the central Entrance Hall by a timber screen with glazed doors surrounded by glazed panels, all with marginal lighting. The junctions of the screen are marked by circular paterae, and brass handles survive. The original floor in this area was made of a marble composition known as 'Biancola', which may survive beneath the present floor covering. Both Vestibule and Entrance Hall have a dado of this composition or terrazzo with stone skirting, and both have ceilings with deep convex-moulded cornices. From the centre of the Entrance Hall rises an imperial stair. Biancola is used for the stairs and landing. The stair has sturdy circular terrazzo newel piers with conical stone tops and with reeded bronze bands punctuated by rosettes. These bands link the handrails of the balustrade, which are bronze below and timber above. The geometric iron balustrades, patterned with ellipses and saltire crosses, also enclose the stairwell on the landing above. A reeded band marks the level of the first floor within the elliptical northern portion of the stairwell. A stone band above follows the curve, with terrazzo pilasters rising to support an entablature with a wave-scroll frieze beneath a lantern with elliptical glazing. On the ground floor, the passageway running behind the stair reflects the form of the stairwell above. Doorways into the spaces surrounding the Entrance Hall have architraves with concave panels to the jambs and lintels and circular paterae to the corner blocks, whilst the doors have a glazed upper panel with marginal lights and a recessed panel below. This configuration is found throughout the building. To either side of the Vestibule is a small room, that to the west originally intended for Typists and that to the east for Enquiries. To the north, filling the corners behind the stairwell, the former Clerk's Retiring Room is now occupied by WCs. The original WC areas for male staff and public to the east have been reconfigured, and the door to the facilities moved further south, removing a lobby. The original WC area for female staff and public has been lost to a passage linking with the northern extension. The windows in this area have all been blocked in connection with the construction of the extension. Also accessed from the Entrance Hall via double doors to the north-east and a coffered lobby is the former Registrar's Court. This retains its original form, with a deep cove surrounding a coffered ceiling emphasised by a geometric framework, its reduced classical form of a piece with the approach seen in features found in the building more generally, such as the internal doorways and Vestibule screen. The fitting out of the courtroom is otherwise more traditional, including the moulded cornice, raised and fielded half-height panelling and draught lobby. The original fitted furniture at the east end consists of a screen with clerk's table, with steps to the registrar's platform, and boxes for the plaintiff and defendant. This has a slightly Arts and Crafts flavour, not consistent with either the traditional or more modern elements of the room, with faceted panels and knob finials to the posts, and has undergone some reconfiguration. The raised registrar's enclosure behind is later, as are the plainer desks in the main body of the room. Recent fixed seating has been added. The hardwood floor specified in the 1928 plans may survive beneath carpet. The 1960s door opening connecting with the extension to the north-east has a surround similar to those of the original doorways. An original doorway to the south-east connects with an area formerly occupied by the Registrar and other staff. This is also accessed via the south-eastern external entrance, which opens to a lobby and an open-well stair with a plain metal balustrade and moulded timber handrail ramped towards the turns. The area has its own WC. The former Registrar's Room has an original chimneypiece with a pulvinated frieze and a beaded bolection-moulded opening surrounding an iron grate decorated with a vine motif. This room originally connected with the former Business Room immediately to the west, but there has now been some reconfiguration and subdivision with the creation of a passageway to the north. The western area of the original building was formerly occupied by the Cash Office, with a subdivision creating a Plaint Office to the south, with a Strong Room to the west and the Chief Clerk's Office in the north-west corner. Surviving openings with double doors in the western wall of the Entrance Hall gave access to a counter separating cash office employees from the public. This area is now open, with the window openings to the north having been extended to create door openings accessing the northern extension. The westernmost window is blocked. In the south-west corner of the building is the judge's stair with lobby, mirroring that in the south-east corner of the building.
On the first floor, the stair opens onto the Crush Hall. The Biancola floor may survive beneath the current floor covering. The ceiling is compartmented with deep cyma-moulded cornices, the beams supported on pilasters. In this area the walls are terrazzo with a dado and stone skirting. At the southern end of the hall a curved partition with pilasters has been inserted, extending to west and east along the line of the beam to create two corner rooms, the form of the partition reflecting that of the stairwell with its flanking lobbies opposite. The date of this intervention is not known. Within the Crush Hall in the south-west corner created by the partition is a telephone box made to complement the building, employing the form of architrave found in the building's doorcases, the box's full-length glazing having the same marginal lights. Clearly not in its original position, the box is thought to have been moved. It is not shown on the 1928 plans but may have been constructed then or shortly afterwards. The first K2 kiosks, on which this design is loosely modelled, were installed in London in 1926. Double doors to the west of the stair lead to a lobby with a glazed roof, its paired metal glazing bars forming a framework with circular motifs at the junctions, which precedes the Judge's Court in the north-west corner of the building. This room has a ceiling and panelling as in the Registrar's Court. The judge's platform is enclosed by the same panelling, whilst other fittings, including here a reporters' box and jury box with sloping back-rests and integral writing slopes, have recessed panels. On the wall behind the judge's bench is a facing of terrazzo, including elements found in the entrance frontispiece and elsewhere in the building. A fluted frame with paterae backs a blank battered stepped panel, the whole surrounded by black stone rising slightly towards the centre and with a distinctly Art Deco character. The room contains two later desks and later fixed seating. The hardwood floor may survive beneath carpet. Adjacent to the courtroom to the south and accessed also via the judge's stair in an arrangement similar to that for the registrar on the ground floor is the Judge's Room, which retains panelling with sunk panels incorporating a chimneypiece with pulvinated frieze, as well as shutters, cupboards and glazed bookcases. The fireplace contains a reeded register grate. The former Consultation Room to the east of the Judge's Room has now been combined with the lobby which formerly connected the two rooms and reconfigured. The rooms to the north of the stair, formerly the Jury Room and Counsel room, have been altered by the blocking of the northern windows by the northern extension. In the south-east corner of the building, the entrance to the former Bailiff's Room has been moved further south. This room has been stripped internally, initially for use as a family court, with a false ceiling and partitions inserted. The small former store adjacent to the north of the stair does not retain internal features of note.
Concrete steps leading from the main and south-west stairs provide access to the basement, which occupies the western and central parts of the site. The walls are of painted brick and the floors of concrete. The Heating Chamber to the north retains some original pipework. Large spaces were provided for the storage of files, and there was a coke store beneath the central entrance served by chutes from coal plates in the paving in front of the building.
The area in front of the building to the south is paved with York stone. In front of the doorways, lozenge-shaped stones are incorporated into the paving. The Cleaver Street boundary is marked by a dwarf stone wall in which are set panels of railings with narrow spear heads between posts with urn finials. Geometric consoles employing Greek keys flank the central gate piers which originally supported lamps, the upper part of the iron framework containing the monogram 'GVR' surmounted by a crown. The original corresponding gates survive, with plainer gates to the subsidiary entrances.
Detailed Attributes
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