Courtenay Lodge And South East Boundary Wall Courtenay Terrace is a Grade II listed building in the Brighton and Hove local planning authority area, England. First listed on 24 March 1950. House, hotel, flats. 11 related planning applications.
Courtenay Lodge And South East Boundary Wall Courtenay Terrace
- WRENN ID
- second-transept-marsh
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Brighton and Hove
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 24 March 1950
- Type
- House, hotel, flats
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Courtenay Lodge is a house built around 1840 as part of Courtenay Terrace in Hove. It was later used as a hotel and is now residential flats. The building’s design has been altered over time, with additions made to the north front in 1899. It is constructed of stucco over brick, with a bitumen-covered mansard roof and roughcast stacks.
The south front of the building is four storeys high plus an attic, with three bays on the right and two on the left. It features a moulded cornice and string course, with decorative surrounds to sash windows that have a mix of glazing bar patterns. A renewed first-floor canopy with a balustrade runs along the front, with French casement windows. The ground-floor windows have a mixed pattern of glazing.
The north elevation is in an 'L' shape, with two bays on the right and two on the left. It incorporates a shaped gable dormer. An entrance is located in a corner projection, surmounted by an oriel with a belvedere and a roof in an ogee shape. This corner projection also features ornate, late 19th-century panelled double doors.
Detailed Attributes
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