Latitude: 52.9472 / 52°56'49"N
Longitude: -1.1465 / 1°8'47"W
OS Eastings: 457445
OS Northings: 339204
OS Grid: SK574392
Mapcode National: GBR LPR.XN
Mapcode Global: WHDGZ.C58Z
Plus Code: 9C4WWVW3+V9
Entry Name: Midland Railway Station
Listing Date: 12 July 1972
Grade: II*
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1271301
English Heritage Legacy ID: 454892
Also known as: Nottingham station
Nottingham station tram stop
NOT
ID on this website: 101271301
Location: Lace Market, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, NG2
County: City of Nottingham
Electoral Ward/Division: Bridge
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Nottingham
Traditional County: Nottinghamshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Nottinghamshire
Church of England Parish: Nottingham St George with St John the Baptist
Church of England Diocese: Southwell and Nottingham
Tagged with: Railway station Tram stop Edwardian architecture
The following building:
NOTTINGHAM
SK5739SW CARRINGTON STREET
646-1/23/87 (East Side)
12-JUL-1972 MIDLAND RAILWAY STATION
GV II
Shall be upgraded to:
NOTTINGHAM
646-1/23/87 CARRINGTON STREET
12-JUL-72 (East side)
MIDLAND RAILWAY STATION
GV II*
Railway station. 1904. By AE Lambert and Charles Trubshaw for the Midland Railway Company. Constructed of a mixture of red brick, terracotta and faience (glazed terracotta) with slate and glazed pitch roofs over the main buildings. Neo-Baroque style.
PLAN: frontage forming porte-cochere, booking hall and offices, platform buildings, overbridges, Transport Police offices. Main frontage and booking hall span the tracks, and are linked to the platforms by stairs and lifts. Covered overbridges and stairs link the platforms.
EXTERIOR: frontage has plinth, dentillated cornice, balustrade, rusticated columns, windows with cornices or pediments in Gibbs surrounds, pedimented doorways. carriage entrances have good Art Nouveau wrought-iron gates. Symmetrical front, single storey, 9 bays, has central domed clock tower, 2 stages, with paired Tuscan columns and pedimented windows. Round-arched doorway flanked by single windows, then elliptical arched carriage entrances with enriched pediments. Beyond, bays with 3 windows, then further carriage entrances with flat gables. End bays with a window to left and door to right.
Returns have pedimented carriage entrances flanked by round arches. Right return has an attached boundary railing with square gate piers. Porte cochere has glazed iron truss roof. To right, police office, domestic style, 2 storeys, L-plan.
Attached to its left return, a cabmens' shelter, wooden, with extensive glazing and lean-to tile roof. Towards the rear of the station complex, fronting Station Street, is Forward House, which is the former parcels office.
The outside of the booking hall has polychrome bands and similar Baroque detail. 3 round-arched openings flanked by doorways, then by wider arched openings. Above, 5 round windows.
INTERIOR: the booking hall has glazed tiles, paired Doric pilasters, round-arched openings and round windows. Coffered ceiling with central glazed barrel vault. Diocletian end windows.
At the rear, a covered footway spanning the tracks, with a staircase and lift tower at each end.
Platforms 1-5 have mainly single storey buildings with Baroque detailing and round-arched openings with fanlights. 2 storey block, 10 bays, on platform 2/3. Continuous canopies with renewed sheet steel roofs and wooden valances, carried on riveted lattice girders and cantilever brackets. Riveted steel stanchions with cast-iron bases. Footbridge spanning platforms and tracks, with glazed cross-braced structure and roof. Platform buildings retain most of their original detail. The interior of the buffet on platform 4/5 has original terracotta
ornament, painted over, including pilasters, chimneypiece and
coved ceiling.
HISTORY: The third Midland Station to have been built in Nottingham. Built in response to the challenge made by the Great Central Railway and the facilities provided by its grand Victoria Statiion which opened in 1861 (now demolished). Having cost approximately £1M, the station was opended in to the public on 17 January 1904, although final completion not reached until later in that year.
SUMMARY OF IMPORTANCE
This is an important and outstanding complex of railway station buildings and structures. The station has survived exceptionally well. The high quality of its Neo-Baroque architectutre, rare among English railway stations, and the importance of the American influence on its design, the first to exhibit this, add extra significance and make it of outstanding national importance.
The Buildings of England: Pevsner N: Nottinghamshire: London:
1979-: 247
Nottingham Railway Station. An Architectural Assessment: Minnis J: May 2005. Unpublished
Listing NGR: SK5744539204
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