History in Structure

Weston Acres, Including Terrace Wall

A Grade II Listed Building in Chipstead, Hooley and Woodmansterne, Surrey

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.3255 / 51°19'31"N

Longitude: -0.1755 / 0°10'31"W

OS Eastings: 527221

OS Northings: 160069

OS Grid: TQ272600

Mapcode National: GBR DH.8FR

Mapcode Global: VHGRQ.XY27

Plus Code: 9C3X8RGF+6Q

Entry Name: Weston Acres, Including Terrace Wall

Listing Date: 25 March 1999

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1244402

English Heritage Legacy ID: 473435

ID on this website: 101244402

Location: Woodmansterne, Reigate and Banstead, Surrey, SM7

County: Surrey

District: Reigate and Banstead

Town: Reigate and Banstead

Electoral Ward/Division: Chipstead, Hooley and Woodmansterne

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Sutton

Traditional County: Surrey

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Surrey

Church of England Parish: Woodmansterne St Peter

Church of England Diocese: Southwark

Tagged with: Architectural structure

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Description


TQ 26 SE
WOODMANSTERNE STREET
Woodmansterne
66/2/10053
Weston Acres, including terrace wall

II

Built as a large house, later accommodation for Seafarer's Society. 1906, the north entrance front added in 1915, by Sydney Tatchell FRIBA. The two late C20 wings to east and west are not of special interest. Arts and crafts style of pebbledash with brick quoins on brick plinth with sandstone mullioned windows and tiled roofs with hooped gutter brackets and brick chimneystacks. Two storeys with irregular fenestration. Asymmetrical building roughly 1-shaped on plan. The most impressive front is the south or garden front which is of two storeys; 8 windows. Lefthand bay projects under gable with Venetian window to firstfloor and 5-lightbay to ground floor. To the right is a 4 : 3 light window, then a diagonally placed external chimneystack, followed by a further 4: 3 window. To the right of this are two single mullioned windows and a hipped tiled porch. Next there is a projecting gable with tiled decoration and a 7-light bay on each floor. The penultimate bay has single mullioned windows and the extreme right bay has a triple window on first floorwith cambered half-glazed door flanked by sidelights. Set back two storey wing to right originally had a loggia on the ground floor with round-headed arches. Set back wing has one 5-light and one 4-light window and one storey 191 5 addition with filled in round-headed arches. Attached to this is a terrace wall of red brick about 5 feet in height, reducing to 3 feet with 6 square brick piers with stone bat[ finials. West side has 2 : 1 windows then 191 5 flat-roofed extension misleadingly dated 1906 with 4-light window to first floor and 3-tight to ground floor. North or entrance front has four windows to 191 5 addition, the centre under a pyramidal roof with weathervane. Projecting porch with sandstone brackets and arched doorcase, at time of survey concealed by late C20 wood and glazed porch. Tall staircase windows and 5-light window to first floor and 3-light window to ground floor on left. 1-wing of two storeys with mullioned and two parallel ranges. Former kitchen yard and stabling of one or two storeys with mullioned windows. The design was exhibited at the Royal Academy exhibition in 1916 and was published in several building magazines of the period.
(A Stuart Gray "Edwardian Architecture" 1985, p.347. "The Architect" 1 December 1916.)


Listing NGR: TQ2722160069

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