History in Structure

Western House

A Grade II* Listed Building in Cotham, City of Bristol

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.4627 / 51°27'45"N

Longitude: -2.6031 / 2°36'11"W

OS Eastings: 358196

OS Northings: 173920

OS Grid: ST581739

Mapcode National: GBR C6G.8H

Mapcode Global: VH88M.THPK

Plus Code: 9C3VF97W+3Q

Entry Name: Western House

Listing Date: 1 November 1966

Last Amended: 30 December 1994

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1207773

English Heritage Legacy ID: 379457

Also known as: Western College, Bristol

ID on this website: 101207773

Location: Kingsdown, Bristol, BS6

County: City of Bristol

Electoral Ward/Division: Clifton Down

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Bristol

Traditional County: Gloucestershire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Bristol

Church of England Parish: Cotham St Saviour with St Mary and St Paul, Clifton

Church of England Diocese: Bristol

Tagged with: House

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Description



BRISTOL

ST5873NW COTHAM ROAD, Cotham
901-1/4/1166 (North side)
01/11/66 Western House
(Formerly Listed as:
COTHAM ROAD
(North side)
University Board Office and No.1)

GV II*

Formerly known as: Western College COTHAM ROAD.
Congregationalist college, now offices. 1905-6. By Henry Dare
Bryan. Limestone ashlar, ashlar stacks and tiled roof with
shingled lanterns. Butterfly plan with 3 linked single-depth
blocks. Arts and Crafts style.
EXTERIOR: 2 storeys; 11-window range. A wide symmetrical front
with angled wings to a central porch with flanking octagonal
towers and a gabled hall behind. A keyed semicircular-arched
doorway has Jacobean Doric columns with strapwork lower
sections, a Doric entablature and 2-leaf oak doors. Above is a
4-light mullion window flanked by Jacobean-style pilasters to
a pulvinated frieze and cornice, and tall parapet.
The towers have a cornice with spouts on grotesque head
corbels and an openwork parapet, with steep pyramidal
shingle-hung roofs with lead finials. Behind is the hall gable
with a small 3-light window, and a large shingle-hung louvred
ridge topped by an octagonal one with a weather vane.
Ground-floor stone mullion and 2 transom leaded casements,
with 6-light widows either side of the porch, and 9-light
windows in the wings; one window in from the ends are wide
canted bays that extend up through the overhanging eaves, with
a central 9-light window on both floors, to a parapet and a
tile-hung dormer; on the ridge behind are small lanterns. The
end gables have octagonal clasping buttresses with barleysugar
tops and ball finials, large external stacks with tiled bases
to 3 diagonally-set stacks, small panels carved with an open
book, and lion-head gutter spouts. The rear gable of the hall
has a large mullion and transom window.
INTERIOR: fine and complete, a full-height aisled central hall
with a timber gallery on elliptical arches and carved Doric
columns, to a semicircular vaulted roof with vine-carved ribs;
3/4 panelled wainscotting throughout, with good doorcases to
the rear of the hall with fluted pilasters to a segmental
pediment; stair hall to the left has an open-well stair with a
pulvinated uncut string, strapwork carving, turned balusters
and square newels, and a panelled ceiling; the Common Room has
a wide Tudor arch with stopped jambs above a small
Tudor-arched fireplace, and a fitted dresser with a dentil
cornice; Tudor-arched fireplaces in other rooms; 1/2-glazed
doors; the service block to the rear has 2 built-in dressers,
a tiled pantry and a 'Gradient' range. A fine example in this
style by a distinguished local architect, and considered to be
Bristol's best Arts and Crafts building.
(The Builder: 1905-: 276; Gray A S: Edwardian Architecture:
London: 1985-: 126).


Listing NGR: ST5819673920

External Links

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