Listed Buildings Search
This page displays the details of the listed property you have selected. (NB: The list description is primarily to aid identification. It is not a definitive inventory of items of interest in the building).
Back to the Listed Buildings search form.
English Heritage Reference: | 423290 |
---|---|
RBKC Reference: | 38/34 |
Property: | 167 QUEENS GATE 167 |
Street: | QUEENS GATE , SW7 |
Date: | 07/11/1984 |
Grade: | II* |
Grouped: | |
Description: | Town house. 1889-9,by Mervyn Macartney. Red brick and stone. Five storeys above a basement and one in the roof. The principal facade is three windows wide and articulated by moulded brickwork; mullioned windows with leaded glazing. Loggia of stone of fairly pure Italian classicism fronting the two northern bays; three storey canted bay of stone to the southern bay. Pedimented Dutch gable above the two northern bays. Stone balustrade to the area. Interior: The interior survives to a remarkable extent; in general details such as mouldings, cornices and door furniture and services such as lavatories and lifts survive throughout. The basement contains a very substantial sequence of rooms with many original fittings, cupboards etc; the kitchen, hall and passages glazed in white tiles above a plastered and painted dado. Ground floor: Vestibule: Panelled walls, marble floor, marble fire surround; the overmantel forms part of the panelling; panelled plaster decoration to ceiling. The vestibule is separated from the staircase hall by an open arcade. The principal staircase rises to the first floor only and has balusters in a Jacobean manner. Doors to the south-west room and south-east room have handsome lugged architraves under a pediment, and panelled reveals. South-west room: panelled dado and door surrounds as in staircase hall. Marble fire surround. with mosaic work in checks and handsome broad panelled treatment to chimney breast as a whole. Fitted glazed cupboards facing the fireplace; semi-circular niche above with a form of shell decoration. South-east room: panelled dado, elaborate dentil cornice, Tudorish stone fire surround; chimney piece and fitted sideboard in a Tudor-Jacobean manner. East room: panelled dado, chimney piece in an eclectic 'English Renaissance' style. Conservatory at east end, possibly not original. First floor: the principal reception room is L-shaped., the rear wing framed by pilasters and columns of pink marble. Ceiling decorated with panelled plasterwork in a faintly classical manner. Two fine columned fire places of white marble with mosaic decorative cheeks. Panelled alcove beside the eastern fireplace in an Adamish style. In the staircase hall: glazed cupboards with architrave and pediment matching the adjacent doors, secondary staircase to upper floors with turned balusters, glazed screen to servants' stairs. From this floor upwards the principal staircase is lit by a deep light well, decorated by a band of scrolling ornament at first floor level. East room: panelled dado, marble fire surround with De Morgan tiles in the cheeks, classical chimneypiece of wood, framing mirrors. Second, third, fourth and fifth floors: the principal features are the fireplaces which are of two kinds: a light eclectic, classical chimney piece with De Morgan tiles in the cheeks and cast iron grate; in the south-west, north-west, south-east and east rooms on the second floor, and the south-west room on the third floor, and a simpler, but still classicising chimney piece with a cast iron grate, some of the grates having typical aesthetic movement decoration, in the north-west, south-east and east rooms on the third floor, and in various rooms on the fourth and fifth floors. |
English Heritage Picture: | External Hyperlink to English Heritage photograph of this listed building |