Haig House With Attached Steps And Railings is a Grade II listed building in the Peak District National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 13 March 1951. House. 3 related planning applications.

Haig House With Attached Steps And Railings

WRENN ID
graven-cloister-spring
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Peak District National Park
Country
England
Date first listed
13 March 1951
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: EPC · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

This is a house with attached steps and railings, dating back to 1697 and originally built for the Duke of Rutland. It now serves as a Royal British Legion Club and incorporates a natural spring bathing pool. Subsequent alterations and additions occurred in the early 19th century, including the construction of side wings.

The building is primarily sandstone and limestone, with stone slate, concrete tile, and Welsh slate roofs. The original house is L-shaped, three stories high with an attic, and features an infill angle. A two-story side wing extends along the west side, with a single-story wing attached. The original 17th-century section exhibits prominent quoins, shaped kneelers with ball finials, and chamfered gable copings.

The main entrance features a six-panel door leading to a set of four stone steps with a mid-19th century Neo-classical cast-iron balustrade. A double-chamfered mullioned window with leaded lights is located on the left side, alongside a single-light stair window. A rebuilt gable includes a band connecting the kneelers. To the right of the gable is a single bay with two-light chamfered mullioned windows on each floor, topped by a parapet. The left return has a gable featuring a large round-arched three-light window with a transom, which illuminates the bathing pool; an altered window is above it, along with a chamfered single-light window. A renewed two-light window is in the attic. On the right is a chamfered two-light window on the ground floor, followed by an altered window and then a square-faced two-light mullioned window. A projecting two-story side wing on the left has an open-fronted rustic porch with a four-panelled door set within a tufa-lined recess, sheltered by a fish-scale, stone-slated canopy. Both gable ends of this wing also feature two-light mullioned windows.

Inside, the original open-well staircase retains square newels with molded caps; the balustrade is mostly boxed in, except in the attic where exposed turned balusters remain. The staircase newels are supported by inserted props. The bath pool is covered by a round-arched vault, measuring approximately 10 meters by 5 meters, and accessed by two flights of stone steps with iron handrails.

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Nearby listed buildings

  1. The Cottage Grade II 20 m
  2. Wall on West Side of Bath Gardens Linking Rutland Buildings to Haig House Grade II 22 m
  3. Coulsden Cottage Grade II 24 m
  4. Rutland House Grade II 29 m
  5. Bank House Number 1 Grade II 33 m
  6. Gateway Gate Piers and Plinth Wall Across Front of Trustees Savings Bank Grade II 36 m
  7. Saxby Grade II 37 m
  8. Iron Railings and Gate at Rutland House Grade II 37 m
  9. Bank House Numbers 2 and 3 Grade II 42 m
  10. Iron Railings and Gate at Saxby Grade II 43 m