We don't have any photos of this building yet. Why don't you be the first to send us one?
Latitude: 52.1345 / 52°8'4"N
Longitude: 1.1024 / 1°6'8"E
OS Eastings: 612416
OS Northings: 253003
OS Grid: TM124530
Mapcode National: GBR TLV.3J6
Mapcode Global: VHLBD.2M32
Plus Code: 9F4344M2+QW
Entry Name: Vista Steps at Shrubland Hall
Listing Date: 2 March 2022
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1478282
ID on this website: 101478282
Location: Mid Suffolk, IP6
County: Suffolk
District: Mid Suffolk
Civil Parish: Barham
Traditional County: Suffolk
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Suffolk
A flight of ornamental steps terminating the Green Terrace vista at Shrubland Park, created in the mid-C19, probably in association with Sir Charles Barry's landscape improvements.
A flight of ornamental steps terminating the Green Terrace vista at Shrubland Park, built in the mid-C19, probably in association with Sir Charles Barry's landscape improvements.
MATERIALS
The nosing and balustrade of the steps are made of limestone, with the treads covered in cement. The terrace is built of yellow brick.
PLAN
The steps are located at the northern end of the Green Terrace.
DESCRIPTION
The staircase has a flared base of five steps that curls outwards to terminate in an empty round plinth at each end of the curtail step. The upper ten steps are balustraded with square plinths at each end. They rise to a rectangular, stone-flagged terrace, balustraded to the south, east and west. The base of the terrace is built of rusticated yellow brick.
The Shrubland estate is thought to have originated with the building of the Old Hall by the Booth family in the early C16 but in the 1770s the architect James Paine (1717-89) was commissioned by John Bacon to design a new hall on a new site. This Georgian building still forms the core of the present hall and occupies a dramatic site at the top of a steep escarpment. Sir William Middleton purchased Shrubland in 1788 and the same year commissioned Humphry Repton (1752-1818) to suggest improvements, some of which were carried out. Sir William Fowle Fowle Middleton inherited the estate from his father in 1830 and had the Hall extensively remodelled by the architect J P Gandy-Deering. In association with his nationally renowned head gardener Donald Beaton (who remained in charge at Shrubland until 1852), Sir William and Lady Middleton developed an elaborate and complex collection of gardens by the Hall and at the foot of the escarpment. In the late 1840s (possibly 1848) they commissioned Charles Barry (1795-1860) to continue to turn their ideas for an Italianate house and garden into reality, and it was during this time that Barry oversaw the creation of the Balcony Garden, the Descent, and the Lower or Panel Garden. The gardens were finally finished in 1854. After his death in 1860, Sir William's cousin Sir George Nathaniel Broke Middleton took over the estate which in 1882 passed to his niece and her husband James St Vincent, fourth Baron de Saumarez. During their period William Robinson was consulted on modernising some of the planting. The Hall was used as a convalescent home during the First World War and the Old Hall as a brigade HQ during the Second World War. In 1965 a health clinic was established in the Hall by the sixth Baron and on his death the estate passed to the seventh Baron. The site has since been sold and remains (2021) in private ownership.
The Vista Steps stand within the Tower Plantation, an area of woodland surrounding the Prospect Tower, built in the 1770s (Grade II, NHLE 1033242). The steps stand at the northern end of a vista called the Green Terrace which runs for over 740m through avenues of trees down to the southern edge of the pleasure grounds where it terminates at a Grade II listed gateway (NHLE 1352053).
Parts of the Green Terrace are likely to have originated as a road or carriage drive in the C17, but the current extent of the vista dates to the mid-C19. The steps are likely to date to the period around 1850 when Barry's pleasure grounds were completed.
The steps have been very little altered since their construction. Between 1958 and 1969 a modernist house called 'Shrubland Vista' was built a short distance to the north.
The vista steps at Shrubland Hall are listed at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
Architectural interest:
* they are finely considered and embellished with architectural detail such that they were clearly intended for display and to impress;
* they are associated with Sir Charles Barry's Italianate landscaping and form an important part of the major vista that runs through the pleasure grounds of the historic estate.
Historic interest:
* they make an important contribution to Shrubland Park, widely considered to contain the most elaborate and famous gardens in Suffolk.
Group value:
* they have strong group value with the Grade I registered park and garden and the Grade II listed Hall, along with the many other listed buildings situated throughout the estate.
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
Other nearby listed buildings