North Pavilion Cottage South Pavilion Cottage is a Grade II listed building in the Reigate and Banstead local planning authority area, England. First listed on 27 January 1989. Pavilion and cottages. 2 related planning applications.

North Pavilion Cottage South Pavilion Cottage

WRENN ID
blind-spandrel-vetch
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Reigate and Banstead
Country
England
Date first listed
27 January 1989
Type
Pavilion and cottages
Source
Historic England listing

Description

A cricket pavilion and two cottages, now two dwellings, was built in 1937 by Sir Edwin and Robert Lutyens for Sir William Mallinson at Pine End. The building was converted around 1950. It is constructed of graduated weatherboard with a wood shingle roof. The design is H-shaped, incorporating the former cricket pavilion in the centre of the ground floor, originally containing changing rooms at the front and washrooms at the rear. Cottages form cross-wings and extend over the pavilion on the first floor, with a linked block of outbuildings at the rear centre. The cross-wings are two storeys high, the centre is one storey with an attic. The building has a 1:3:1 bay arrangement. Windows are wooden framed with small-pane glazing and casements. The central range has an attic under a catslide roof, supported by artificial stone columns, creating a ground-floor loggia. This loggia is brick-paved and has a recessed central entrance, formerly with a board door on each side leading to the changing rooms, the one on the left now blocked. The outer bays each have a four-light window. The attic floor features a wood-shingled clock tower with a hexagonal clock face in a panel and a hipped gable, flanked by two-light, hipped dormers. The cross-wings have a two-light window on each floor (those on the ground floor being inserted during the 1950 conversion) and swept hipped roofs with metal ridge stacks of coupled, polygonal flues. The returns each have steps up to a central door with small-pane glazing over a panel, framed by an architrave with console bracketed pediments. There is a four-light window either side of this door, and three two-light windows above. The rear elevation of the cross-wings each has a French window and a two-light window above. The central range originally had a board door with a small four-pane window to the outside and two to the inside on each side of the outbuilding block; the door on the left is now a wide window, and the door on the right is a French window. Two four-light attic dormers are also present. The outbuilding block is of brick and includes a board gate (at the junction with the main range) and a door to each return. Internally, doors are of board construction with strap hinges.

Detailed Attributes

Structured analysis including materials, construction techniques, architect attribution, and related listed building consent applications. Sign in or create a free account to view.

Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.