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  • Liverpool

    Liverpool

    Liverpool

    The Vines, 81 Lime Street, Liverpool, 1907.

    By Walter William Thomas (1849-1912).

    Walkers Ales of Warrington.

    Grade ll* listed.

    See also:-

    pubheritage.camra.org.uk/pubs/112

    breweryhistory.com/wiki/index.php?title=Vines,_Liverpool

    www.govserv.org/GB/Liverpool/236929139665303/The-Vines-%2…

    m.facebook.com/The-Vines-the-Big-House-236929139665303/

    ymliverpool.com/historic-lime-street-pub-vines-plans-attr…

    www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2020/feb/07/liverpool-pu…

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    The Vines public house

    Statutory Address: 79-87 Lime Street, Liverpool, L1 1JQ

    Grade II* Listed

    List Entry Number: 1084210

    National Grid Reference: SJ3505890334

    Summary

    Public house, 1907, by Walter Thomas for Robert Cain & Sons. Neo-Baroque style.

    Reasons for Designation

    The Vines, constructed in 1907 to the designs of Walter W Thomas for Robert Cain & Sons, is listed at Grade II* for the following principal reasons:

    Architectural interest:

    * it has an impressive neo-Baroque design with flamboyant principal elevations that maximise its prominent corner location;

    * its imposing composition and highly ornate interior reflect the status, wealth and ambition of Robert Cain who sought to create public houses of great beauty;

    * the interior decoration is of a superior quality and includes plasterwork by the Bromsgrove Guild and H Gustave Hiller, carved mahogany woodwork throughout, repousse copper panels, and a stained-glass dome in the former billiards room;

    * the interior retains high-quality original fixtures and fittings, including elaborate fireplaces, carved baffles with Art Nouveau stained glass, ornate wall panelling, arcaded screens, a striking wave-shaped beaten-copper bar counter in the lounge, and Art Nouveau fireplaces in the upper-floor accommodation.

    Group value:

    * it has strong group value with its sister building, the nearby Grade I-listed Philharmonic Dining Rooms, which was also designed by Walter W Thomas for Robert Cain & Sons, as well as other listed buildings on Lime Street and Ranelagh Place, including the Grade II-listed Crown Hotel, Adelphi Hotel and former Lewis’s department store.

    History

    The Vines was constructed in 1907 to the designs of Walter W Thomas for the Liverpool brewery Robert Cain & Sons and replaced an early-C19 pub operated by Albert B Vines from 1867; hence the current pub’s name. The interior decoration includes works by the Bromsgrove Guild and H Gustave Hiller.

    Walter W Thomas (1849-1912) was a Liverpool architect who is best known for his public house designs, but who also produced designs for Owen Owen’s department store known as Audley House, and houses around Sefton Park. As well as The Vines, Thomas also designed The Philharmonic Dining Rooms (1898-1900, Grade I) on Hope Street for Robert Cain & Sons, and rebuilt The Crown (1905, Grade II) for Walkers Brewery of Warrington, which is also on Lime Street.

    Robert Cain (1826-1907) was born in Ireland but grew up in Liverpool. As a teenager he became an apprentice to a cooper on board a ship carrying palm oil from West Africa and after returning to Liverpool in 1844 he established himself first as a cooper, and then subsequently as a brewer in 1848. Cain began brewing at a pub on Limekiln Lane, but soon moved to larger premises on Wilton Street, and finally to the Mersey Brewery on Stanhope Street in 1858, which Cain extended in the late C19 and early C20. As well as brewing Cain also invested in property, built pubs, and ran a hotel adjacent to the Mersey Brewery. As his brewery business grew (known as Robert Cain & Sons from 1896) it bought out smaller brewers and took control of their pubs, evolving into a company that owned over 200 pubs in Liverpool by the late 1880s. In 1921 Robert Cain & Sons merged with Walkers Brewery to become Walker Cains and the Liverpool brewery at Stanhope Street was sold to Higsons in 1923. After a succession of owners from the 1980s onwards the brewery is being converted for mixed use.

    The Bromsgrove Guild of Fine Arts was established in 1898 by Walter Gilbert as a means of promoting high-qualify craftsmanship in metal casting, woodcarving and embroidery in the style of a medieval guild, and included the creation of apprenticeships. The Guild subsequently expanded into other areas of art and design, including jewellery, enamelling, and decorative plasterwork, and recruited the best craftsmen. In 1900 the Guild was showcased at the British Pavilion at the Exposition Universelle in Paris and in 1908 it received a royal warrant. Famous works included the gates at Buckingham Palace, interior decoration on RMS Lusitania and RMS Queen Mary, and the Liver bird statues on the Royal Liver Building in Liverpool. Although the Guild survived the loss of key craftsmen and the Great Depression of the late 1920s it was finally wound up in the 1960s.

    Henry Gustave Hiller (1864-1946) was a Liverpool-based designer and manufacturer of stained glass who trained at the Manchester School of Art under Walter Crane. He established a studio in Liverpool in around 1904 and retired in 1940. Although primarily known for his stained glass he worked in a wide variety of mediums, including plasterwork.

    Details

    Public house, 1907, by Walter W Thomas for Robert Cain & Sons. Neo-Baroque style.

    MATERIALS: sandstone ashlar with a pink-granite ground floor, slate roof coverings.

    PLAN: The Vines has a V-shaped plan with a north corner in-filled at ground-floor level by a former billiards room. It occupies a corner plot at the junction of Copperas Hill and Lime Street with principal elevations onto both streets. It is bounded by Copperas Hill to the south-east, Lime Street to the south-west, and adjoining buildings to the north-east and north-west.

    EXTERIOR: The Vines is of three-storeys plus attic and basement with a nine-bay elevation onto Lime Street, a canted south corner bay, and a six-bay return on Copperas Hill, and entrances on each elevation. The pub has a steep slate roof set behind ornate Dutch gables and a balustraded parapet, and the ground floor has banded rustication to the pink-granite facings. The ground floor is lit by large bow windows containing original patterned brilliant-cut glass and replaced etched glass, whilst the upper-floors have casement windows set within carved surrounds. A cornice projects out from the main face of the building above the ground floor and stood atop it to both the Lime Street and Copperas Hill elevations are later gold letters that read ‘WALKERS WARRINGTON ALES’, with additional letters to Lime Street that read ‘THE VINES’. Above the first floor is a stringcourse interrupted by segmental floating cornices over some of the windows, and in between the windows are floriated drops attached to corbelled pedestals that support Ionic engaged columns between the second-floor windows. The Lime Street elevation has two large Dutch gables with scroll detailing, elaborate finials, paired casement windows with elaborate surrounds, and oculi to the gable apexes, whilst the Copperas Hill elevation has a single gable in the same style. Projecting out from the right gable on Lime Street is a large bracketed clock.

    SOUTH CORNER The south corner has a tall doorway to the ground floor accessing the public bar with a decorative wrought-iron and gilded-copper gate with a vestibule behind containing a patterned mosaic floor incorporating the lettering ‘RCS’ (Robert Cain & Sons) and two partly-glazed and panelled doors; that to the right is no longer in use. The entrance doorway itself is flanked by engaged Ionic columns with copper capitals and drops, and above are large triple keystones and a segmental open pediment, all exaggerated in size. Inscribed to the central keystone is ‘The Vines’ in gilded lettering. To the south corner’s first floor is a glazed oculi with a festoon above incorporating a figurative head keystone, whilst the second-floor window mirrors that of the other elevations. Rising from the top of the corner bay behind the parapet and sandwiched by the Dutch gables on Lime Street and Copperas Hill is a tall round tower topped by a dome with a squat obelisk finial.

    LIME STREET The Lime Street elevation incorporates a further entrance to the centre of the ground floor, which is identically styled to that to the south corner, but the lower section of the original gate has been removed and replaced by late-C20 concertina gates. The vestibule behind is lined with pink granite and has a decorative plasterwork ceiling and a small bow-shaped window (possibly an off-sales opening originally and in 2019 now covered with an advertising sign) directly opposite the doorway with a multipaned segmental overlight above. Partly-glazed panelled doors to each side lead into the lounge and public bar to the left and right respectively; both doors are multipaned to their upper halves with panes of brilliant-cut glass. To the left of the main building on Lime Street is an additional lower, rendered single-bay that comprises 79 Lime Street; part of an earlier (now demolished) building that was partly raised, altered and re-used in the early C20 to house The Vines’ main accommodation stair. It has a tall doorway to the ground floor flanked by Corinthian columns with two panelled doors with overlights; that to the left previously served a now-demolished part of the building to the left whilst that to the right accesses the stair for The Vines. Single plate-glass sash windows exist to the right on two floors above; that to the second floor has been altered and made smaller, presumably when the stair was inserted internally. Corresponding windows to the left have been blocked up, but are partly visible internally.

    COPPERAS HILL The ground floor of the pub’s Copperas Hill elevation also has a number of entrances, including one with a doorway incorporating a scrolled floating cornice and prominent keystone that leads into the public bar and originally also a former snug (now altered into a kitchenette). A plainer doorway to the right leads to a stair accessing the upper floors at this end of the building. A single-storey flat-roofed section to the far right of the elevation with a plain recessed doorway is a later addition and provides external access to the former billiards room.

    REAR ELEVATIONS The rear (north-east and north-west) elevations are plainer and of brick with large casement windows, some of which incorporate Art Nouveau stained glass. The entire rear yard area is occupied by a flat-roofed billiards room with a large lantern roof over a stained-glass dome visible internally. A cast-iron fire escape provides access down onto the roof of the billiards room.

    INTERIOR: internally the pub has a linear sequence of rooms from south-east to north-west formed by a public bar, lounge and smoke room, with a large former billiards room at the rear. There are high ceilings and carved mahogany woodwork throughout the ground floor, and plasterwork by the Bromsgrove Guild and H Gustave Hiller.

    PUBLIC BAR The south corner entrance leads into a large public bar with a richly moulded plasterwork ceiling and a panelled mahogany bar counter to the north corner that originally ran down the north-east side of the room, but was shortened in 1989. Rising from the bar counter are short mirror-panelled piers supporting a pot shelf surmounted by three twin-armed brass lamps, and in front of the counter is a brass foot rail. The bar-back behind forms part of a carved, arcaded and panelled screen that runs down the north-east side of the public bar and incorporates stained, leaded, and cut glass, and two openings; the opening to the right has lost its original panelled infill, which would have been in similar style to the bar-back, whilst that to the left is an original open doorway with a broken segmental pediment above containing a clock face that gives the appearance of an outsized grandfather clock with the doorway through the pendulum case. The screen separates the public bar from a rear corridor cum drinking lobby that accesses toilets and leads through to the lounge and smoke room at the opposite end of the pub. Bench seating and a mahogany and tiled fireplace with a carved overmantel exist to the public bar’s south-west wall, and a small late-C20 stage has been inserted at the south-east end of the room. At the north-west end of the room adjacent to the Lime Street entrance is a panelled and stained-glass arcaded screen with an integral drinking shelf that conceals the bar service area, possible off-sales and basement access from view. In the eastern corner of the bar adjacent to a lobby off the Copperas Hill entrance is an altered glazed screen covered with modern signage chalkboards that probably originally led through to another small room/snug, which is now a kitchenette.

    Behind the public bar the corridor/drinking lobby’s north-east wall is panelled and incorporates a wide arched opening to the centre with early-C20 signage plaques with incised and gilded lettering and arrows pointing towards the ladies and gents lavatories, which are accessed through an inner screen with Art Nouveau stained glass and a vestibule with panelled doors. Off to the right is a doorway through to the altered snug and access to a stair leading up to the first floor.

    LOUNGE The lounge is accessed from the Lime Street entrance and shares a bar servery with the public bar, although the bar counter in the lounge is set within a wide arched opening and is more elaborate and wave-shaped with a decorative beaten-copper front. Above the counter are brass lighting rails with paired globe lights. Ornate carved and fluted Corinthian columns stood atop panelled pedestals support the room’s ceiling, which continues the same richly decorated plasterwork as the public bar. Similarly detailed pilasters also exist to the walls, which are panelled. To the room’s north-west wall is a tall mahogany and marble fireplace with a decorative beaten-copper panel depicting torches and swags, and a beaten-copper Art Nouveau fire hood, and large caryatids to each side supporting an entablature and segmental pediment above. Two doorways either side of the fireplace with their doors removed (one of the doors with an etched-glass upper panel that reads ‘SMOKE ROOM’ survives on the second floor in the Lime Street range) lead through into the smoke room, which has a back-to-back fireplace with the lounge.

    SMOKE ROOM The smoke room has booth seating set around three walls separated by baffles with Art Nouveau stained-glass panels and fluted octagonal uprights surmounted by paired lamps. The walls above the seating have highly decorative mahogany panelling with fluted pilasters, carved mouldings, marquetry detailing and built-in bell pushes set within decorative plates. To the top of the walls, and set below a coffered ceiling that incorporates a large plasterwork oval to the centre depicting the signs of the zodiac, is a deep plasterwork frieze depicting putti in various Arcadian scenes. The room’s elaborate fireplace is also of mahogany, marble and beaten copper, with a semi-circular panel depicting Viking ships in relief and flanking fluted octagonal columns with Art Nouveau floriate capitals supporting an entablature.

    FORMER BILLIARDS ROOM At the rear (north-east side) of the ground floor, and accessed from the lounge and rear corridor, is a vast room (probably a billiards room originally and now known as the Heritage Suite) with an exposed floorboard floor, wall panelling incorporating doorcases with shaped heads, giant Corinthian pilasters, carved festoons and cartouches, and a coffered ceiling with a massive, oval, stained-glass domed skylight to the centre with a plasterwork frieze at its base depicting apples, foliage and lion’s heads. To the south-west wall is an elaborate carved mahogany and marble fireplace with a large mirror built into the panelling above and surviving to the south-east wall is original built-in bench seating. At the north-west end of the room is a later panelled bar counter with a substantial bar-back behind incorporating Roman Doric columns supporting a deep entablature and flanked by later shelving. A doorway in the east corner leads through to an altered entrance foyer off Copperas Hill.

    UPPER FLOORS A steep, narrow stair off Copperas Hill leads up to the first floor and rooms in the south corner and south-east end of the building. The stair has modern tread coverings and has lost its balusters, but an original newel post and handrail survive. The main accommodation stair serving the upper floors in the Lime Street range is contained within the neighbouring single-bay property of 79 Lime Street and rises from a ground-floor foyer with later inserted partitioning. The stair is a wide dog-leg stair with substantial carved newel posts and balusters, pendant drops, a closed string, and a glazed-tiled dado.

    The upper floor rooms at the south-east end of the building have been modernised to accommodate en-suite bathrooms and toilets, but the floor plan largely survives with only minor alteration, including boxing-in on the second-floor landing. The rooms and landings retain plain moulded cornicing and door architraves, and a mixture of original four-panel and modern doors. Chimneybreasts also survive, and most rooms retain Art Nouveau cast-iron and tiled fireplaces. A stair flight up to the second floor survives with closed strings and turned balusters and newel posts. On each of the first and second floor landings is a doorway through to the upper-floor rooms facing onto Lime Street, which are no longer in use. These spaces, except for the main stair at the north-west end, have been altered and modernised, along with the attic rooms.

    The attic at the south-east end of the building and the basement were not inspected.

    Legacy
    The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.

    Legacy System number: 359023
    Legacy System: LBS

    Sources

    Books and journals
    Brandwood, G, Davison, A, Slaughter, M, Licensed to Sell. The HIstory and Heritage of the Public House, (2004), 77, 78, 115, 147, 150
    Brandwood, G, Britain’s Best Real Heritage Pubs. Pub Interiors of Outstanding Historic Interest, (2013), 118
    Pye, K, Liverpool Pubs, (2015), 68-72
    Sharples, J, Pevsner Architectural Guides: Liverpool, (2004), 184

    Websites
    The Bromsgrove Guild, accessed 7 November 2019 from www.architectural-heritage.co.uk/garden-ornament-history

    historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1084210

    Posted by Glass Angel on 2019-08-13 10:54:58

    Tagged: , Liverpool , Merseyside , Grade II* Listed , England , Great Britain , United Kingdom , The Vines , Pub , Public House , EBB , GB , UK

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  • Liverpool

    Liverpool

    Liverpool

    The Philharmonic Dining Rooms, 36 Hope Avenue, Liverpool, L1 9BX

    Grade I detailed

    Checklist Entry Number: 1207638

    Detail

    History
    The Philharmonic Dining Rooms was created in 1898 to the styles of Walter W Thomas for the Liverpool brewery Robert Cain & Sons. The interior decoration was carried out by a number of various craftsmen and artists, which include the renowned sculptor Charles John Allen (1862-1956) and the architect and designer Henry Bloomfield Bare (1848-1912). Other designers and craftsmen had been supervised by George Corridor Neale and Arthur Stratton of College College’s (afterwards the College of Liverpool) School of Architecture and Applied Arts.

    Walter W Thomas (1849-1912) was a Liverpool architect who is greatest recognized for his public dwelling types, but who also produced types for Owen Owen’s department retail outlet recognized as Audley House, and properties all around Sefton Park. As very well as the Philharmonic Eating Rooms, Thomas also intended The Vines (1907, Grade II*) for Robert Cain & Sons, and rebuilt The Crown (1905, Quality II) for Walkers Brewery of Warrington, both on Lime Road.

    Robert Cain (1826-1907) was born in Ireland but grew up in Liverpool. As a teenager he turned an apprentice to a cooper on board a ship carrying palm oil from West Africa and after returning to Liverpool in 1844 he set up himself initial as a cooper, and then subsequently as a brewer in 1848. Cain started brewing at a pub on Limekiln Lane, but before long moved to greater premises on Wilton Road, and eventually to the Mersey Brewery on Stanhope Avenue in 1858, which Cain prolonged in the late C19 and early C20. As very well as brewing Cain also invested in assets, developed pubs, and ran a resort adjacent to the Mersey Brewery. As his brewery business grew (acknowledged as Robert Cain & Sons from 1896) it acquired out more compact brewers and took command of their pubs, evolving into a company that owned more than 200 pubs in Liverpool by the late 1880s. In 1921 Robert Cain & Sons merged with Walkers Brewery to grow to be Walker Cains, and the Liverpool brewery at Stanhope Street was offered to Higsons in 1923. Right after a succession of proprietors from the 1980s onwards the brewery, which even now stays in procedure on web site in 2019, is currently being transformed for combined use.

    Charles John Allen was appointed as a lecturer at the Liverpool Faculty of Architecture and Used Arts (later known as Liverpool College of Artwork) in 1894 and was a top figure in the New Sculpture motion, although Henry Bloomfield Bare was President of the Liverpool Architectural Modern society and also labored in the United States, editing an Arts and Crafts magazine there in the early 1890s.

    Facts
    General public home, 1898-1900, by Walter W Thomas for Robert Cain & Sons. Exuberant Cost-free Design and style.

    Elements: generally ashlar with a pink and gray polished-granite plinth, slate roof coverings.

    Program: the Philharmonic Eating Rooms has a rectangular system and occupies a corner plot at the junction of Hope Street and Hardman Street with principal elevations on to both of those streets. It is bounded by Hope Road to the east, Hardman Street to the south, and adjoining buildings to the north and west.

    EXTERIOR: externally the Philharmonic is of three-storeys as well as an attic at the southern close, and has an asymmetrical composition with stepped and formed gables with obelisk finials, tall chimneystacks, turrets with copper ogee domes, and a corbelled balustraded balcony that wraps around the second flooring. The two principal elevations are of sandstone ashlar set upon a gray polished-granite plinth with a pink-granite band over that varieties a deep sill band to the ground-floor home windows. The home windows, which are mostly mullioned and have formed surrounds and heads, consist of a mixture of etched, leaded and stained glass to the floor flooring, and leaded glazing to the upper floors.

    HOPE Street ELEVATION: the 8-bay entrance elevation faces east on to Hope Road and incorporates the key entrance, which lies in just 4-bays to the ideal of centre, the initial floor of which jobs ahead with slender, corbelled two-storey octagonal turrets to the outer bays and a two-bay balustraded serpentine balcony to the centre. The most important entrance by itself consists of a huge spherical-arched opening with really ornate Artwork Nouveau gates of wrought iron and crushed copper by the architect and designer Henry Bloomfield Bare (1848-1912). The gates are ornamented with female heads and garlands and to the centre is a cartouche depicting a Liver hen flanked by gazelles (the emblem of the Cain’s Brewery) with a banner below with reduction lettering that reads: ‘PACEM AMO’ (‘I appreciate peace’), the motto of the Cain’s Brewery. To the suitable is a significant stained-glass lunette window, with the lower portion of the window projecting out in the form of a canted bay. The two-bay initially-floor serpentine balcony higher than is supported by grey polished-granite Ionic and Tuscan columns sat atop the building’s pink-granite plinth band. The central Tuscan column is shorter as it also supports a considerable pink-granite paired corbel that incorporates a recessed licensing plaque on the south facial area. The balcony incorporates two segmental-headed bays with limited, paired, polished-granite Tuscan columns separating the bays and doorways flanked by solitary lights. To the roof is a five-gentle dormer window. The two bays to the significantly ideal of the elevation are established beneath a formed gable and have two significant 9-light-weight home windows to the ground flooring with eared surrounds and spherical-headed upper lights, basic three-light mullioned home windows to the very first flooring, and doorways on to the second-floor balcony with glazed double doorways with an exaggerated triple keystone above. To the gable apex is the monogram ‘R C S’ (Robert Cain & Sons) in stylised reduction lettering set inside of a keyed surround. On the left of the elevation is a vast bay with a stepped gable incorporating a shallow bow-formed attic oriel window. On the ground ground is a huge 6-gentle window with an eared encompass and round-headed upper lights, and to the very first floor is a three-light mullioned window with an elaborate surround, which include flanking engaged columns. Main out onto the next-floor balcony are doorways in the same design as people to the formed-gabled bay. At the southern finish of the elevation is a large six-light window in the exact type as its neighbour. Occupying the two flooring higher than is a two-storey canted bay oriel window with carved frieze decoration that is mirrored on the building’s south elevation facing Hardman Road. The two windows on each elevation just about touch every single other at the south-east corner, forming an un-roofed turret or a huge polygonal oriel window. HARDMAN Street ELEVATION: the shorter a few-bay south aspect elevation on to Hardman Avenue has a tall ground-floor entrance doorway underneath the two-storey oriel window with a panelled and etched-glass doorway (no more time utilised), paired square overlights, and floating dentilled segmental cornice above set about a carved roundel exhibiting a guy in profile (musician or composer) and musical instruments. The two bays to the still left are set beneath a stepped gable and have equally styled windows to the corresponding stepped gable on the east elevation, and a even more doorway that is a broader edition of its neighbour to the appropriate.

    Interior: internally the interior decoration and styling was concluded by designers and craftsmen supervised by George Corridor Neale and Arthur Stratton of University College’s (afterwards the University of Liverpool) Faculty of Architecture and Applied Arts, and it incorporates Arts & Crafts things throughout the ground flooring. Jacobean-model ceiling plasterwork exists to most parts of the floor flooring, alongside with intensely moulded cornices, mahogany woodwork, and mahogany fireplaces with marble inserts.

    Principal ENTRANCE: the principal-entrance vestibule has a mosaic floor and is made up of an inner doorway comprised of a classical doorcase with a swan-necked pediment established inside of a glazed arched monitor with paired etched-glass side lights.

    Most important Ingesting Lobby: the key entrance sales opportunities into a significant consuming lobby with an elaborate Jacobean-type ceiling with pendant drops, a ornamental patterned mosaic ground, and a huge horseshoe-shaped bar servery/counter with a mosaic-clad entrance, a brass foot rail, and an island bar again driving. Climbing from the bar counter and supporting the ceiling are fluted Corinthian columns incorporating carved bands. On the east facet of the foyer is a superior, patterned glazed-tile dado that proceeds into and all over the southern section of the ground ground, which is divided from the major ingesting lobby by a total-top panelled display with arcaded leaded-glazed clerestory lights with stained-glass protect motifs. A doorway in the south-east corner of the drinking lobby potential customers into a general public bar at the south end, although doorways in the south-west corner guide to the gentlemen’s toilets, a scaled-down drinking foyer and the Hardman Road entrance, and a stair accessing the 1st ground. On the west aspect of the most important drinking foyer is a massive inglenook lined with wall panelling and repoussé copper panels by Henry Bloomfield Bare depicting musicians. Curved bench seating flanks a central fireplace with a pink-marble insert and an elaborate mahogany chimneypiece incorporating a spherical mirror. Two stained-glass panels above depict Lord Baden-Powell and Field Marshal Earl Roberts KG VC who had been commanding officers battling in the 2nd Boer War, which was taking area at the time of the pub’s development.

    SNUGS: a short corridor qualified prospects northwards from the main drinking lobby to the previous billiards space (now acknowledged as the Grande Lounge) and carries on the lobby’s mosaic flooring. The corridor is flanked on possibly facet by two sq. snugs (now humorously recorded as ‘Brahms’ and ‘Liszt’ higher than their entrances) with panelled partitions onto the corridor and drinking foyer, geometric patterned clerestory windows, and canted corners facing into the drinking lobby with classical doorcases with segmental pediments and six-panel doorways with trefoil-arched glazed higher panels with etched glass. The former smoke space (‘Brahms’) on the west side has wall panelling up to just earlier mentioned fifty percent-top in darkish and light veneers with diamond, cross and quatrefoil styles and developed-in bell pushes. To the top of the west wall is a Gothic-model clerestory arcade with stained-glass panels driving and on the north wall is a fireplace with an overmantle incorporating a broken pediment and a mirror. The previous information area (‘Liszt’) on the east facet of the corridor also has wall panelling up to just earlier mentioned half-top, which incorporates carved relief panels with many imagery, together with porpoises, and constructed-in bell pushes, and a hearth with a swan-necked pediment, fluted Ionic pilasters, and an overmantle incorporating a mirror. Lights the area on the east aspect, and overlooking Hope Street, is a large stained-glass lunette window depicting musical devices and St Cecilia, the patroness of tunes, and words that read: ‘Music is the Common Language of Mankind’.

    Previous BILLIARDS Room: at the close of the corridor running off the major drinking lobby is a vast segmental-pedimented doorcase with modern gilded lettering that reads ‘Grande Lounge’ and a 4-panel doorway with glazed upper lights. The Grande Lounge is a large room at the north conclude of the floor floor that is a person-and-a-fifty percent storeys in height and occupies the full depth of the constructing, and is believed to have initially been a billiards home. The ceiling is coffered and is sprung from corbelled arches with two of the major coffers that contains skylights with floriated stained glass a third significant coffer at the east end of the area is solid with Jacobean-design and style used timberwork because of to the existence of rooms above. The home is lit by two significant 9-light-weight windows at the east finish with stained and leaded glazing, crystal chandeliers, and twin-arm wall lights, and has wall panelling up to image-rail top. The panelling incorporates vertical and horizontal repoussé copper panels by Henry Bloomfield Bare and Thomas Huson (1844-1920) the horizontal copper panels variety a band around the room and incorporate depictions of maritime landscapes, vegetation, animal and chicken life, and fish, although the vertical panels depict stylised thistles. Above the panelling is ornamental plasterwork by Charles John Allen (1862-1956), which includes elaborate, and tall, gilded thistles that operate close to the overall space in the model of a frieze. Over the room’s entrance door the plasterwork depicts the crowning of Apollo and above the main fireplace on the north wall is ‘The Murmur of the Sea’ the two are flanked by corbelled male and woman herms supporting the ceiling. The key fireplace has an overmantle incorporating a huge later on etched mirror and on the west wall is a further more hearth set in just a shallow inglenook. A doorway in the south-west corner of the room with a classical doorcase integral to the wall panelling potential customers into a pot-washing place and fireplace exit.

    GENTLEMEN’S Toilets: the gentlemen’s toilets, found off the key drinking lobby, has a attractive patterned mosaic flooring and patterned glazed-tiled partitions incorporating Art Nouveau mosaic panels and frieze, and retains its initial sanitary ware, which is composed of pink-marble basins and pink imitation-marble urinal surrounds.

    General public BAR: the public bar at the south finish of the ground ground has a doorway straight off Hardman Street, which is no lengthier in use. Off to the north-east corner accessibility through to the most important drinking lobby has been opened up by way of the removing of two doorways so that two linking areas now move into a person a further. The bar’s ceiling is a continuation of that in the ingesting foyer and is all over again supported by Corinthian columns soaring from the bar counter, and a high, patterned glazed-tile dado proceeds all around the space, even though the reduced aspect is panelled above in areas. The ground is carpeted, while it is possible that the mosaic-do the job obvious in neighbouring areas continues beneath, and modern-day flame lamps carried on brass rails sit across the window sills. Projecting out from the centre of the screen dividing the general public bar from the primary consuming foyer is an L-formed bar counter/servery that proceeds the line of the key ingesting foyer bar, but in this article it is plainer with a panelled entrance and a brass countertop. An etched-glass and mahogany bar back again incorporates swan-neck pediments and glazed arches that echo these of the primary entrance monitor. On the west aspect of the bar is a panelled screen with etched-glass higher panels that separates the bar from a vestibule and corridor off Hardman Road with a patterned mosaic flooring and decorative glazed-tile dado. The display screen has two doorways into the general public bar, just one of which kinds part of a lobby delivering entry to the services places at the rear of the bar counter. Off to the west facet of the corridor is a home in the south-west corner of the floor flooring that has been converted into ladies’ toilets. The corridor from the Hardman Street entrance potential customers to a small former ingesting lobby with a bow-formed counter on the east facet with a crested mahogany display screen sat atop that incorporates etched-glass sashes. A doorway in the glazed monitor separating the community bar from the relaxation of the ground ground prospects via to the first-ground stair and major consuming lobby.

    Upper Floors: the stair to the very first floor is narrow with turned newel posts and balusters, and a ramped handrail. The higher flooring retain moulded doorway architraves and four-panel doorways, whilst some afterwards doors have been inserted on the 1st ground. At the southern conclude of the very first floor is a large and simply specific dining place with simple moulded cornicing and a later on inserted bar counter and bar back again that now conceals a smaller house in the southern Hope Street turret. A chimneybreast survives, but the room’s fireplace has been eliminated and an adjacent doorway has been inserted to generate accessibility into a neighbouring space, which has entry out onto the initially-floor balcony overlooking Hope Road and includes a timber and painted solid-iron fire. The rest of the initial ground is comprised of contemporary professional kitchens and former domestic rooms at the north close that are now employed as places of work and storage at the very least just one of which retains an first hearth. The rooms are accessed by a small stair from a person of the kitchen parts because of to the bigger height of the previous billiards area below them. A now boxed-in stair flight leads up to the second floor, which has a corresponding huge room above the very first-floor dining space that is now disused, but was almost certainly also originally one more eating place. The area retains accessibility to its turret house and also retains its chimneybreast, but has misplaced its hearth. Three other rooms occupy the ground at this end, which include former bathrooms. The second-flooring rooms at the north close of the building, which are now a personnel flat, have been not obtainable for inspection. The attic at the southern close has a collection of plain rooms and a disused drinking water tank.

    CELLAR: the beer cellar, which lies beneath the southern finish of the making, has concrete flooring and retains its unique barrel chute.

    historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-listing/list-entry/1207638

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    Philharmonic Eating Rooms
    36 Hope Avenue, Liverpool

    Constructed: 1898.
    Quality II* mentioned

    The Philharmonic Dining Rooms is a public home at the corner of Hope Street and Hardman Avenue in Liverpool, Merseyside, England, and stands diagonally opposite the Liverpool Philharmonic Corridor. It is frequently acknowledged as The Phil. It is recorded in the Countrywide Heritage Checklist for England as a selected Grade II* listed making.

    Background

    The community dwelling was constructed in about 1898–1900 for the brewer Robert Cain. It was intended by Walter W. Thomas (not to be baffled with Walter Aubrey Thomas the designer of the Royal Liver Making) and craftsmen from the University of Architecture and Applied Arts at College Faculty (now the University of Liverpool), supervised by G. Hall Neale and Arthur Stratton.

    Paul McCartney performed at the Philharmonic when he was a younger musician, and all through an impromptu live performance in 2018.

    Architecture

    Exterior
    The creating is built in ashlar stone with a slate roof in an “exuberant free of charge design” of architecture. It has a combination of two and a few storeys, with attics and cellar. There are ten bays alongside Hope Road and a few together Hardman Street. Its exterior features contain a wide variety of home windows, most with mullions, and some with elaborate architraves, a two-storey oriel window at the junction of the streets, stepped gables, turrets with ogee domes, a balustraded parapet over the second storey, a serpentine balcony (also balustraded) previously mentioned the key entrance in Hope Road, and a lower aid sculpture of musicians and musical devices. The main entrance incorporates steel gates in Artwork Nouveau design and style, their style remaining attributed to H. Bloomfield Bare.

    Interior
    The interior is adorned in musical themes that relate to the close by live performance corridor. These decorations are executed on repoussé copper panels designed by Bare and by Thomas Huson, plasterwork by C. J. Allen, mosaics, and products in mahogany and glass. Two of the more compact rooms are entitled Brahms and Liszt. Of unique interest to site visitors is the substantial high quality of the gentlemen’s urinals, created in rose-coloured marble.

    Appraisal
    Pollard and Pevsner, in the Buildings of England series, state that it is the most richly embellished of Liverpool’s Victorian community homes, and that “it is of fantastic excellent in nationwide terms”. The Grade II* listing indicates that it is bundled between “especially vital structures of much more than particular desire”. Pye describes it as a single of Liverpool’s “architectural gems”.

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philharmonic_Eating_Rooms

    Posted by Glass Angel on 2019-08-13 10:55:47

    Tagged: , Liverpool , Merseyside , Quality I mentioned , England , Good Britain , United Kingdom , EBB , GB , Uk

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  • Chatsworth – Grounds and Gardens

    Chatsworth – Grounds and Gardens

    Chatsworth - Grounds and Gardens

    Chatsworth Residence

    Quality I mentioned

    List Entry Number: 1373871

    PARISH OF CHATSWORTH CHATSWORTH PARK SK 2570/2670 6/82 29.9.51 Chatsworth Property GV I Country residence. South wing 1687-9 by William Talman. East entrance 1689-91 by Talman, west entrance 1700-03, north front 1705-7 by Thomas Archer. Alterations and additions 1756-60 by James Paine, primarily changed by alterations and additions which includes the north wing 1820-42 by Jeffrey Wyatt, later on Sir Jeffrey Wyatville. Baroque and Neo-classical designs. For the 1st, Fourth and Sixth Dukes of Devonshire. Sandstone ashlar (typically area) with other stones and marbles employed for decoration. Roofs hidden driving parapets. Essentially preserving the system of the former Elizabethan house, of four ranges all-around a courtyard, and with a very long north east wing with a return assortment to south and wall enclosing a extensive entrance courtyard. Three flooring, the floor ground addressed as a basement due to the fall of the land. North wing of a single storey around a basement. South entrance of twelve bays, 3-6-3 with a rusticated basement and two upper flooring of equal peak. Superior finish pavilions have huge fluted Ionic pilasters. Comprehensive entablature with carving to the frieze of the pavilions and daring inscription CAVENDO TUTUS throughout the centre. Balustrade added in 1693 and urns in 1701. The basement has section headed glazing bar sashes and in the centre a double return flight staircase, a alternative of 1837 by Wyatville. The very first and 2nd flooring have twelve glazing bar sashes in moulded architraves with stepped keyblocks. East entrance of 1-8-1 bays, proceeds the rusticated basement, entablature, balustrade and urns. Phase headed sashes to ground ground and glazing bar sashes in keyed moulded architraves, to the two upper floors. The end bays are set again and are flanked by paired huge pilasters. The front was altered by Wyatville in 1823, who taken out a row of attic windows and refaced the entire entrance. West entrance (initially the entrance front) of 3-3-3 bays. The centre three advanced and pedimented, on four fluted Ionic connected columns. The outer bays have huge fluted Ionic pilasters. Rusticated basement with phase headed glazing bar sashes and a central flat arched entrance with moulded architrave. Two tiers of glazing bar sashes previously mentioned, in moulded architraves with stepped keyblocks, the centre and higher types embellished with aid carving. Total entablature with carved frieze, carving also in the pediment. Balustraded parapet with urns. Garlands close to the centre windows. Carving by Nadauld and by Samuel Watson. North front of 3-5-3 bays, the centre five forming a shallow curve, taller than the relaxation. Rusticated basement, big fluted Corinthian pilsters to the centre bow, and glazing bar sashes in moulded architraves. The facade was altered by Wyatville whose north wing abuts it. He altered the fenestration of the centre section, getting rid of attic windows and earning the pilasters fluted. The internal courtyard has elevations of five and seven bays, mainly in their existing kind as altered by Wyatville. Basic pilasters with carved trophies by Watson. Top ground windows with alternately triangular and segmental pedimented architraves. Wyatville replaced an open colonnade on the south side. North wing has north elevation of 1-5-5-5-1 bays, adopted by the orangery of 2-5-2 bays. Of the first component the center and conclude bays are divided by simple pilasters and have solid parapets with urns relatively than balustraded parapets. Rusticated basement with section headed glazing bar sashes and glazing bar sashes in moulded architraves above. The orangery has the five middle bays innovative and divided by simple pilasters. Significant casement windows. Balustraded parapet, dated 1827. The wing is terminated by a a few by six bay pavilion and belvedere, growing to 4 storeys. Entablatures in between storeys, glazing bar sashes in moulded architraves and the corner bays with simple pilasters. The belvedere has open up colonnades on all sides. Decreased pavilion further than. Return range to west with gateways and entrance lodges. Tripartite composition with 3 spherical-arched carriageways. The centre flanked by paired Tuscan Doric columns, triglyph frieze, entablature and parapet, partly balustraded. Flanked by glazing bar sashes in moulded architraves and rusticated highly developed end bays. Partly balustraded parapet. The central gates are re-established and are late C17 by Jean Tijou. Wall to south enclosing entrance courtyard with statues on pedestals. Interior: North entrance corridor transformed from a kitchen area by James Paine. Tuscan Doric columns with triglyphs. Wyatville replaced the chimneypieces and widened the staircase. North corridor enclosed and altered by Wyatville. The Painted Hall of two storey peak. Ceilings and walls painted by Laguerre, assisted by Ricard, in 1694. Stone carvings by Samuel Watson. Staircase 1911-12 by W H Romaine-Walker. The south variety commences with private apartments, just one place with an early C18 chimneypiece, a different with early C19 painted panels in the window reveals. The Oak Area has panelling and twisted columns of c1700, introduced from Germany by the Sixth Duke. The chapel in the south west corner is of two storeys, with an east gallery. Cedar panelling with limewood carvings by Samuel Watson. Sumptuous Baroque alabaster reredos developed by Cibber and carved by Watson. Accomplished in 1694. Partitions and ceilings painted by Laguerre. On the west aspect, the west stairs with iron balustrade of 1702 by John Gardom, with wrought iron panels on the landings by Tijou. Painted ceiling by James Thornhill. West entrance hall with Grisaille painting. Leather Space and Decrease Library redecorated in 1839 by Crace. The ground ground of the north wing has company rooms. Very first flooring has mainly personal apartments, taking in the upper 50 % of the chapel and hall, except the north wing. On the south facet non-public eating and drawing rooms, fundamentally early C18 but redone in 1780s by John Carr. The eating place was altered by Wyatville. In the west wing the centre bed room was originally a vestibule and has late C17 panelling. Other rooms with delicate late C18 plasterwork. Duchess’ dressing space ceiling by Joseph Palfreyman, 1775. The Crimson Velvet Room has a chimneypiece by Kent. On the north facet the Library designed in 1832 by Wyatville with woodwork and fittings by Armstrong and Siddons. Late C17 ceiling with painting by Verrio. The Ante-Library by Wyatville with ceiling painting by Hayter. To the north the suite of rooms in Wyatville’s north wing. Dome Home, the Great Eating Room with segmental arched coffered ceiling and chimneypiece by Westmacott the Youthful and Sievier. Sculpture Gallery lit by a few lantern skylights. At the north stop ormolu capitals to the columns, by Delafontaine of Paris. Bas reliefs by Thorwaldsen and selection of neo-classical sculpture. 2nd ground contains the point out rooms together the south wing. Excellent Staircase built by Talman (1689-90). Ceiling by Verrio statues and doorcases by Cibber, balustrade by Tijou. The condition Dining Place, Drawing Area, New music Space and Bed room fill the south facet. They have painted ceilings by Verrio, Laguerre and Ricardi and a profusion of wooden carving by the London carvers Lobb, Davis and Youthful, assisted by Watson. The rooms were being decorated in 1689-99, but only the Eating Home survives in its primary condition. In the centre of the west wing is the Sabine Bed room, at first a foyer, with uninterrupted illusionist painting above ceiling and partitions by Thornhill (1708). In the north wing are scaled-down family members rooms and in the east wing the Queen of Scots Rooms, a suite of rooms redone by Wyatville c1830. The oak stairs in between ground and first ground are by Wyatville, 1823-4. At the conclusion of Wyatville’s wing is the Theatre, developed in 1833 as a banqueting chamber. The painted ceiling panels of c1700 by Cheron and Thornhill, ended up at first in the Library. Sources: William, 6th Duke of Devonshire Handbook of Chatsworth & Hardwick, London 1844. J Lees-Milne and J Cornforth Chatsworth. 9 content in Region Life April-September 1968. Duchess of Devonshire The Dwelling: A Portrait of Chatsworth MacMillan 1982.

    Listing NGR: SK2602270104

    Resources

    Guides and journals

    Devonshire, William Duke of, Handbook of Chatsworth and Hardwick, (1844)
    Devonshire, Duchess of , The Dwelling a Portrait of Chatsworth, (1982)
    ‘Country Life’ in September, (1968)

    historicengland.org.united kingdom/listing/the-record/list-entry/1373871

    Posted by Glass Angel on 2016-10-29 17:56:14

    Tagged: , Chatsworth , Property , Gardens , Grounds , Derbyshire , EBB , England , Good Britain , United Kingdom

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  • Manor House Galleries Exhibition: Hitchin and Bancroft, 26-27

    Hitchin, Bancroft, 26-27 (Manor House Galleries)

    The fine house, which dates back to around 1700, is divided into two distinct yet abutting sections, both of which have been carefully restored. The house is two storeys, with a red brick exterior and a moulded brick modillioned cornice below a plain parapet that partially conceals the steep tiled roof. The Northern section is symmetrical, with a five window facade and a magnificent wooden porch that is so impressive it may have been brought from a more imposing facade. The porch features fluted Corinthian columns and pilasters, carved modillions, and a carved rounded head enclosing a cartouche. The whole thing is backed by rusticated woodwork, and a round-headed recess contains the door of eight fielded panels beneath a carved semi-circular fanlight.

    The windows on the house all have curved heads, and they are framed with broad, almost flush frames. The windows on the ground floor have projecting brick keystones that run up into the string at the first floor level. The windows on the upper floor have plain brick aprons. The Northern section of the house has two leaded dormers, while the Southern section may be a later continuation of the design of the main, Northern, facade.

    Overall, the house is a fine example of 1700s architecture, with careful attention paid to the restoration of both sections. The wooden porch on the Northern section is particularly impressive, with its ornate carvings and Corinthian columns.

    Posted by Clanger’s England on 2013-06-22 17:56:30

  • St. Helen’s Church in the Parish of Sefton

    Sefton Parish Church - St Helen

    St Helen’s Church, Sefton is an active Anglican parish church located in the village of Sefton, Merseyside, England. The church, dedicated to St Helen, is the only Grade I listed building in the Metropolitan Borough of Sefton and is considered the “Jewel of South West Lancashire”. It has a rich history dating back to the 12th century when a private chapel for the Molyneux family was built on the site. Over the centuries, various architectural changes were made to the church, culminating in an extensive rebuild during the reign of King Henry VIII in the 16th century. The church’s interior is renowned for its extensive carved Tudor woodwork, including seven screens forming “the magnificent centrepiece of the whole church”, wooden stalls and twenty-six rows of pews, a large 14th-century muniment chest, and a Georgian austere, dark-wood panelling. The church also contains a wealth of monuments ranging from 16th-century brasses of the Molyneux family to the Neo-classical memorial to William Blundell of 1807. Since the Victorian Gothic Revival movement of the 1830s, St Helen’s has undergone several restoration processes, with the most significant changes being the removal of the Georgian galleries and whitewashing, and the addition of a carved wooden ceiling in the nave and side aisles. Today, it is an important cultural and historical site in the United Kingdom, attracting visitors from all over the world.

    Posted by Glass Angel on 2014-05-02 17:28:16