History in Structure

Maldon East Railway Station

A Grade II Listed Building in Maldon, Essex

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.7352 / 51°44'6"N

Longitude: 0.6825 / 0°40'57"E

OS Eastings: 585327

OS Northings: 207465

OS Grid: TL853074

Mapcode National: GBR QM4.5CW

Mapcode Global: VHJK5.SN53

Plus Code: 9F32PMPM+32

Entry Name: Maldon East Railway Station

Listing Date: 27 August 1969

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1256339

English Heritage Legacy ID: 465005

Also known as: Maldon East and Heybridge Station

ID on this website: 101256339

Location: Maldon, Essex, CM9

County: Essex

District: Maldon

Civil Parish: Maldon

Built-Up Area: Maldon

Traditional County: Essex

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Essex

Church of England Parish: Maldon All Saints with St Peter

Church of England Diocese: Chelmsford

Tagged with: Railway station

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Heybridge

Description



MALDON

TL8507SW STATION ROAD
574-1/7/211 (North East side)
27/08/69 Maldon East Railway Station

II

Railway station, converted to offices. 1846. For the Eastern
Counties Railway Company. Red/brown Flemish bond brickwork
with dressings of Gault brickwork, stucco and ashlar. Jacobean
style.
EXTERIOR: 2 storeys and attics and with former station
platform canopy to rear. The main block consists of 2
identical pavilions linked by projecting arcade and balcony
with low linking wall above. The front elevation of each
pavilion is surmounted by a Flemish gable with narrow slit
window and corner parapets with cornice on consoles. The
centre of 1st floor has a 2-light square-headed casement with
transom. The projecting 9-bay arcade has square stuccoed piers
with capitals supporting semicircular arches with stucco trim,
keystones; single arches complete the return flanks of arcade.
Decorative balustrade above with cast-iron finials over each
pier. The 3rd arch-bay from each end projects slightly.
The ground floor elevation, recessed behind colonnade is all
of Gault brick and is further recessed in centre between
pavilions. Each pavilion has 2 semicircular-headed windows
with radiating glazing bars in head and a single horizontal
glazing bar, either side of double entrance doors in the
centre. Flanks of central recess have blind recessed
semicircular-arched opening, one now an infilled door. The
central recessed part has 4 similar arched windows, one now in
process of conversion to a door.
The north-west and south-east exposed flanks of pavilions were
formerly similar and have a central smaller Flemish gable,
similar cornice and balustrade and three 2-light casements on
1st floor. The ground floor of north-west pavilion has 3
semicircular-arched windows, recessed within further arched
opening. The formerly obscured south-east flank, ground floor,
is now of red C20 brick with 3 sash windows. The internal
flanks of each pavilion have tall stacks each of 3 diagonal
shafts with attached bands. Some original hopper heads survive
and shallow-pitched gable roofs, behind parapet are, at time
of survey, without cladding.
The rear platform has fretted canopy supported on cast-iron
columns.
INTERIOR: much altered but fine timber roof structures
survive.


Listing NGR: TL8532707465

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