History in Structure

The Castle

A Grade II Listed Building in Burnley, Lancashire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.7748 / 53°46'29"N

Longitude: -2.2556 / 2°15'20"W

OS Eastings: 383254

OS Northings: 430968

OS Grid: SD832309

Mapcode National: GBR DSPS.GL

Mapcode Global: WHB83.BD51

Plus Code: 9C5VQPFV+WQ

Entry Name: The Castle

Listing Date: 29 September 1977

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1244912

English Heritage Legacy ID: 467135

ID on this website: 101244912

Location: Rose Hill, Burnley, Lancashire, BB11

County: Lancashire

District: Burnley

Electoral Ward/Division: Rosehill with Burnley Wood

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Burnley

Traditional County: Lancashire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Lancashire

Church of England Parish: Burnley (Habergham Eaves) St Matthew the Apostle

Church of England Diocese: Blackburn

Tagged with: House

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Description



BURNLEY

SD83SW MANCHESTER ROAD, Rose Hill
906-1/3/241 (East side)
29/09/77 No.254
The Castle

GV II

House. Dated 1908 on rainwater head. By Edgar Wood; altered
and slightly enlarged. Snecked sandstone rubble, flat concrete
roof with asphalt cladding (concealed by parapet). Eclectic
style combining Modernist form with Arts-and-Crafts and
Vernacular Revival detailing.
PLAN: square plan with principal facades to west, south and
east, plus small courtyard and outbuilding attached to north
side and north-east corner respectively.
EXTERIOR: 2 storeys and 3 windows in an asymmetric
composition, the walls carried up without interruption to form
a parapet with flat stone coping (carried round), the doorway
to the left and a full-height canted bay window to the right.
The doorway, up 3 segmental steps, has a deeply splayed reveal
protected by a segmental cornice with free "dentilled"
enrichment to the rim, and a recessed studded board door;
above the cornice is a shallow vertical slot (or sunk panel)
carried up to the parapet, containing a very small 2-light
mullioned window immediately over the cornice, a tall window
at 1st floor, and an upstand in the parapet with a small
2-light opening which echoes the mullioned window below and
has a lintel with nailhead enrichment. In the centre is a
cross-window at ground floor and a 3-light mullioned window
above; and to the right the canted bay which has a
mullion-and-transom window at ground floor, a mullioned window
above, and a raised parapet with an opening like that to the
left. All these windows have flush flat-faced surrounds and
leaded glazing, and some have cast-iron casement openings.
Chimney behind parapet. The 2-window south facade has a
full-height canted bay to the right, like that at the front
but larger, a cross-window to the left and a 1-light window
above this, and a rainwater head with raised lettering "1908".
The east facade (which has added render at 1st floor) has a
single-storey canted bay window to the left with an enriched
upstand to the parapet, 3-light mullioned windows on each
floor to the right, and a service wing attached to the rear
corner (formerly single-storey but now raised to 2 storeys).
The rear has (inter alia) a 2-stage stair-window, various
2-light mullioned windows, and an attached courtyard wall with
a round-headed doorway.

INTERIOR: details altered, but simple dog-legged staircase and
some original fittings survive.
Forms group with front garden wall (qv).

Listing NGR: SD8325430968

External Links

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