History in Structure

Art Gallery and Attached Balustrades Former Public Library

A Grade II Listed Building in Lichfield, Staffordshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.6842 / 52°41'3"N

Longitude: -1.8327 / 1°49'57"W

OS Eastings: 411409

OS Northings: 309629

OS Grid: SK114096

Mapcode National: GBR 3C9.RGY

Mapcode Global: WHCGN.TSHK

Plus Code: 9C4WM5M8+MW

Entry Name: Art Gallery and Attached Balustrades Former Public Library

Listing Date: 11 February 1993

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1209580

English Heritage Legacy ID: 382584

Also known as: Free Museum and Library, Lichfield

ID on this website: 101209580

Location: Lichfield, Staffordshire, WS13

County: Staffordshire

District: Lichfield

Civil Parish: Lichfield

Built-Up Area: Lichfield

Traditional County: Staffordshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Staffordshire

Church of England Parish: Lichfield Christ Church

Church of England Diocese: Lichfield

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Description



LICHFIELD

SK1109NW BIRD STREET
1094-1/4/38 (West side)
11/02/93 Former Public Library and Art
Gallery and attached balustrades

GV II

Public library and museum. 1857-9. By Bidlake and Lovatt.
Brick with buff brick facades, ashlar dressings; parapeted
roof. Right-angle plan with inset octagonal entrance tower to
angle to left. Renaissance style.
2 storeys with basement; 3-window range. Panelled brick plinth
over basement; rusticated end piers and cornice to impost
level and cornice over ground floor; top dentilled brick
frieze and modillioned ashlar cornice. Entrance tower has
rusticated piers and entablature to ground floor; high plinth
and entablature to 1st floor, and cupola with dentilled
cornice and domical vault with wind vane.
Round-headed entrance has tall key to plain fanlight over C20
door; flanking round-headed windows with brick archivolts and
ashlar keys; plinth has square ashlar plaque inscribed: FREE/
LIBRARY/ AND/ MUSEUM, flanking roundels; 1st floor has 3
round-headed windows; round-headed openings to cupola.
3-window range has windows with rubbed brick flat arches and
8-pane sashes with 2 ashlar antae with lotus capitals, tympana
above have archivolts and keys; 1st floor has blind arcading
of 3 pairs of round arches with ashlar colonnettes; two C20
buttresses with continuations of cornices.
Left return facing Museum Gardens is 6-window range, the
windows grouped in pairs with C20 buttresses between. Ashlar
statue of sailor with HMS POWERFUL to his hat band on corbel
to right end; said to date from the Boer War, origin unknown.
Rear is simpler, with lean-to projection with blocked wide
segmental-headed entrance and flanking niches. Right return is
plain, with C20 addition to rear. Entrance tower flanked by
low brick walls and ashlar balustrading of 4-centred arches,
piers with chamfered angles, similar in style to those to
causeway (qv).
INTERIOR: geometrical stair with slender iron balusters and
wreathed handrail; top-lit 1st floor.
(Buildings of England: Pevsner N: Staffordshire: London:
1974-: P.192; Clayton H: Cathedral City: Lichfield: 1977-:
P.102-5).


Listing NGR: SK1140909629

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