Salthill Lodge is a Grade II listed building in the Chichester local planning authority area, England. First listed on 28 February 1989. A Late 18th Century to 20th Century Lodge. 2 related planning applications.
Salthill Lodge
- WRENN ID
- endless-corridor-summer
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Chichester
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 28 February 1989
- Type
- Lodge
- Period
- Late 18th Century to 20th Century
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Salthill Lodge is a lodge, probably dating to around 1804 and originally built for John Newland as part of Salthill House. The lodge was extended and altered in 1977, with a further addition in 1988-89. It is constructed of knapped flint with flint galleting and yellow brick dressings, with a Welsh slate roof. The building is octagonal in plan, with the front, rear, left, and right sides longer than the angles. A rear extension was added in 1977 in a matching style, and a further extension to the right side of that extension in 1988, the latter not being of special interest. Brick quoins mark the angles, and there are 4-centred arched openings. The front features a central wooden door with cusped panels, flanked by windows; the left and right sides have two windows each, and the angles each have one window. All the windows have replacement 20th-century casement windows with Y-shaped glazing bars to the overlights. A window in the rear, left, and angled side was formerly a door. The rear is now partially masked by an extension. A central brick stack has two flues. The interior has had former partitions removed, revealing the central chimney with two fireplaces. John Newland is documented as the owner of Salthill House from 1804, according to Land Tax Assessments. There is a second, originally matching, lodge located on Salthill Road.
Detailed Attributes
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