Queen Elizabeth Hospital (Comprising Main Block And Attached Former Nurses Home And Former Wards) / Banstead Wood House / Queen Elizabeth Hospital For Sick Children

Date:
25 Aug 2000
Location:
Queen Elizabeth Hospital (Comprising Main Block And Attached Former Nurses Home And Former Wards), Holly Lane, Banstead, Reigate And Banstead, Surrey, SM7 2BT
Show all locations
Banstead Wood House, Holly Lane, Banstead, Reigate And Banstead, Surrey, SM7 2BT
Queen Elizabeth Hospital For Sick Children, Holly Lane, Banstead, Reigate And Banstead, Surrey, SM7 2BT
Reference:
IOE01/00776/26
Type:
Photograph (Digital)
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Description

This information is taken from the statutory List as it was in 2001 and may not be up to date.

In the entry for:

TQ 25 NE HOLLY LANE (south side) Banstead

4/11 Banstead Wood House (Queen Elizabeth Hospital for Sick Children)

II

The entry shall be amended to read:-

TQ 25 NE BANSTEAD HOLLY LANE (south side)

4/11 Queen Elizabeth Hospital (comprising main block 29.9.83 and attached former nurses home and former wards)

II

House now hospital. 1937-9 by H S Goodhart-Rendel incorporating remains of house (Banstead Wood) by R Norman Shaw, 1884-90, extensively damaged by fire 1939. Red brick in English bond to ground floor; upper floors tile hung, the main block with much fish-scale tile. Ward block steel framed with concrete panels and brick cladding. Plain tile roofs. Main block of 2 storeys with attic and partial basement has 8-bay garden elevation; to its right a corridor links main block to 3-storey, 25-bay former ward block; to its rear left, return range links main block to former nurses' home which is of butterfly plan, forming corner of rear courtyard, of 3 storeys with attic and 11 first floor windows on courtyard elevation. Garden elevation: Main block: windows are wood-framed with moulded mullions and transoms and leaded casements; bays 1-5, set forward under 3 oversailing gables, have 2-storey canted bay windows to alternate bays; bays 6 and 7, set back, have a gabled dormer and large set-back gable; bay 8 is set in line but is gabled and has a 2-storey canted bay windows; tall cross-ridge stacks with arched panels. Single-storey flat-roofed former kitchen block on right. Further right, ward block has: each floor set back from that below, the 2nd floor less wide (21 bays) with balcony rails to upper floors; the wards were originally open-fronted but in the 1940s the existing metal-framed doors and windows were inserted; rising out of the rear roof slope are the hipped roofs of 3 rear wings; water tower at right end, to rear, has concrete bands, tile-hung stair tower to rear left, and hipped roof with gablets. Left return range: main block is in same style as garden elevation, having 3 bays under 2 oversailing gables on right of lateral stack with lower projecting bay on right. Further left is a lower, 1-storey with attic, 2-bay block which has half-timbered gables with pebble-dashed infill and which is probably part of the original Shaw house. To far left is former nurses' home which has panelled door on right, metal casement windows, and gabled dormers.

Courtyard elevation of former nurses' home has entry at right end and 3rd floor cornice which rises under pent roof to 3 wide gables (one at left end, 2 at right end). Courtyard elevation of main block has: entrance bay with decorative ashlar doorcase to panelled, arched, door, the cornice on fluted columns and supporting 2-storey canted bay window; on left, outskirt with panelled door and wide window; various gabled dormers and tall ribbed stacks; reused rainwater heads dated 1884.

The Shaw house was built for the Garton family. Goodhard-Rendel's design centred upon this building, which was to become the administrative block, but the original house was almost entirely destroyed by fire in 1939 and was subsequently rebuilt to a design by Goodhard-Rendel. Originally there was to be second ward block (further to right) and another nurses' home to complete the rear courtyard, but work was interrupted by war and these were never built.

'The Princess Elizabeth of York Hospital for Children, Banstead Wood', The Architect and Building News, January 28, 1938, pp 131-3.

'The Queen Elizabeth Hospital for Children, Banstead Wood, Surrey', The Builder, March 26, 1948, pp 361-5.

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TQ 25NE HOLLY LANE 4/11 (South Side) Banstead Banstead Wood House (Queen Elizabeth Hospital for Sick Children)

II

House now Hospital. 1884-1890 by R Norman-Shaw with extensive later additions.

Original house brick and tile hung with plain tile roofs and large star-shaped stocks. 2 storeys and attic under gabled dormers. Asymmetrical, with projecting wing of 2 bays to the left, having wood mullion and tramsom windows with leaded lights.

Tile hung dormer in re-entrant angle linking with right hand 3 bay wing; mullioned windows with leaded lights. 3 storey gable front on right hand end with two windows in angle bay rising through two storeys over main entrance; Doric portico to door, fluted half columns with dentilled cornices, moulded and rusticated door arch, 6 panel door with diamond patterning and studs.

Listing NGR: TQ2618758028

Content

This is part of the Series: IOE01/1997 IOE Records taken by Robert Taverner; within the Collection: IOE01 Images Of England

Rights

© Mr Robert Taverner. Source: Historic England Archive

This photograph was taken for the Images of England project

People & Organisations

Photographer: Taverner, Robert

Rights Holder: Taverner, Robert

Keywords

Brick, Concrete, Pebbledash, Steel, Tile, Timber, Victorian House, Monument (By Form), Domestic, Dwelling, Covered Way, Unassigned, Kitchen, Courtyard, Gardens Parks And Urban Spaces, Water Tower, Water Supply And Drainage, Water Storage Site, Childrens Hospital, Health And Welfare, Specialist Hospital, Hospital, Nurses Hostel, Residential Building, Ward Block, Hospital Block