Eyre Arms Public House including flanking walls is a Grade II listed building in the Peak District National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 19 June 1987. Public house.

Eyre Arms Public House including flanking walls

WRENN ID
errant-entrance-lake
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Peak District National Park
Country
England
Date first listed
19 June 1987
Type
Public house
Source
Historic England listing

Description

MATERIALS: coursed limestone with gritstone dressings. The kitchen extension to the south-east is brick. All roof coverings are of slate.

PLAN: the building is rectangular in form, with extensions to the south-west, north-west and north-east sides.

EXTERIOR: the building is of two storeys and three bays, with gable chimneys. Its principal elevation is symmetrical with a central doorway and flanking windows to the ground floor and five windows above. The doorcase has C20 double doors set below a semi-circular fanlight. The door and window openings to the principal elevation appear to date to the early C19, but the joinery to these openings is mid-C20 in date.

The rear elevation of the main range has been extended along its entire length below a slate-covered catslide roof, with a further, small flat-roofed extension to the north-west.

To the south-east of the main range is a small, gabled extension built into the flanking boundary wall. It is built of red brick and has a chimney at its north-east end. The flanking stone wall to the front has an external doorway. To the rear of the main range is another small, gabled extension to the north-east.

INTERIOR: at ground-floor level, the building’s original plan-form has been much altered to form the public house interior, the present manifestation, in a faux-Tudor style, dating to the brewery remodelling of the 1950s.

The front door opens into a small lobby with doors to left and right, giving access to the public bar and lounge bar respectively. The area immediately behind the entrance lobby is occupied by a central servery, from which both bar areas can be accessed. The servery has curved wooden bar counter frontages to both bars, each with linenfold panelling.

The bar areas contain no features of particular note with standard-quality fixtures, fittings, joinery and wall and ceiling surfaces in the faux-Tudor style of the 1950s remodelling.

The toilets, cellar extension, kitchen and storage areas contain no features of note.

The upper floor has undergone similar levels of mid-C20 and later alteration and contains no features of note. Visible sections of structural beams appear to represent C19 or earlier fabric. The building’s roof structure is of king post-form and supports trenched side purlins.

SUBSIDIARY FEATURES: there are flanking, curved, coursed-stone boundary walls extending approximately 6 metres to each side of the building frontage, that to the east incorporating a door opening.

Detailed Attributes

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