Brixton Fire Station

BRIXTON FIRE STATION, 84, GRESHAM ROAD

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Overview

Fire station, 1904-6, by the Fire Brigade Branch of the London County Council Architects Department. With minor later extensions and alterations.
Heritage Category:
Listed Building
Grade:
II
List Entry Number:
1251337
Date first listed:
25-May-1995
List Entry Name:
Brixton Fire Station
Statutory Address:
BRIXTON FIRE STATION, 84, GRESHAM ROAD
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Date:
2004-06-29
Reference:
IOE01/12271/01
Rights:
© Mr David March. Source: Historic England Archive

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Official list entry

Heritage Category:
Listed Building
Grade:
II
List Entry Number:
1251337
Date first listed:
25-May-1995
List Entry Name:
Brixton Fire Station
Statutory Address 1:
BRIXTON FIRE STATION, 84, GRESHAM ROAD

The scope of legal protection for listed buildings

This List entry helps identify the building designated at this address for its special architectural or historic interest.

Unless the List entry states otherwise, it includes both the structure itself and any object or structure fixed to it (whether inside or outside) as well as any object or structure within the curtilage of the building.

For these purposes, to be included within the curtilage of the building, the object or structure must have formed part of the land since before 1st July 1948.

Understanding list entries

Corrections and minor amendments

The scope of legal protection for listed buildings

This List entry helps identify the building designated at this address for its special architectural or historic interest.

Unless the List entry states otherwise, it includes both the structure itself and any object or structure fixed to it (whether inside or outside) as well as any object or structure within the curtilage of the building.

For these purposes, to be included within the curtilage of the building, the object or structure must have formed part of the land since before 1st July 1948.

Understanding list entries

Corrections and minor amendments

Location

Statutory Address:
BRIXTON FIRE STATION, 84, GRESHAM ROAD

The building or site itself may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.

County:
Greater London Authority
District:
Lambeth (London Borough)
Parish:
Non Civil Parish
National Grid Reference:
TQ 31409 75537, TQ 31422 75560

Details

963/18/10031 GRESHAM ROAD 25-MAY-95 84 Brixton Fire Station

II Fire station, 1904-6, by the Fire Brigade Branch of the London County Council Architects Department. With minor later extensions and alterations.

MATERIALS: Red brick with stone dressings. Grey slate roof. Brick chimney stacks.

EXTERIOR: In a commanding Edwardian Baroque municipal style. The frontage to Gresham Road has seven bays and four storeys, plus an attic. A monumental impression is created through the use of rusticated stone cladding and classical features, but the subtly-projecting canted bays, tall chimneys and fine brickwork soften the effect. The stone dressings include ground floor, quoins, modillion cornice, balustrade set within a brick parapet and the central bay. The last has a triangular pediment and a large Diocletian window above the canted bay to the first and second storeys, this surmounted by a stone balustrade. The central section is flanked by three bays on either side, the central of each of these advancing in a shallow canted bay. The windows are all flat-arched, with rubbed brick arches and timber sashes; those on the first floor have ironwork along the sills. The attic dormer windows have alternate triangular- and segmental-pediments. The main entrance to the station is placed off-centre in the ground storey and has a segmental stone hood with prominent keystone. To the right, are a pair of windows with elongated keystones in the heads and the two original appliance bays; to the left, a single window and third appliance opening, this a later insertion although it is identical to the originals and is likely to be near-contemporary with them. All these openings have ornamented stone surrounds and the main appliance bays each have an inscribed timber lintel which reads, across the two bays, 'L.C.C. Fire Brigade Station Brixton' in capital letters. The doors are all modern replacements. The original iron railings on a low wall enclosing the front entrance survive.

The rear is much plainer, with no stone dressings and a blue brick plinth. There is a projecting central bay with curved parapet encasing the staircase; here the windows are strengthened by metal sills to accommodate hook ladder drills. Balconies running across the third and fourth floors, which retain their original railings, give access to firemen's quarters; the railings to the first floor balcony have been replaced by a plastic covering. There is also a single-storey section, part of the original build, to the left of the elevation. The single storey section to the right is a later extension. There is a row of stores and a larger outbuilding, formerly a long ladder shed, in the station yard; these are both original and included in the listing although the ladder shed's run out to Station Road has been in-filled. A small section of the floor in the ladder shed is surfaced in original ironstone blocks, one of the few surviving sections of this material which originally covered the yards and appliance bays in the majority of fire stations.

INTERIOR: The appliance room has modern floor surfaces but retains the original glazed brick walls, although these have been painted, and the original timber door to the rear access. There is an office to the rear, where formerly there were stables, but the four openings to the stalls are in evidence, although they have been filled in. To the side, the watch-room, with a large segmental-arched window, overlooks the appliance room. The plan form of the ground floor is largely intact with corridors divided by round-headed arches leading to the stairwell, a waiting room, the watch room and the former billiards room, now the gym. Most of the glazed brick which lines the corridors and the stairwell has been painted. The sliding pole chambers have their original doors and the staircase retains its metal balustrade and ladder to the roof. The first floor, formerly the station officer's quarters and a dormitory with cubicles for six single firemen, has been altered but retains one timber fireplace surround. The second, third and fourth floors, formerly flats for nine married firemen, survive to a greater degree. The plan form, of individual flats with a shared bathroom on each floor, is readable and there are surviving doors and fireplace surrounds in the rooms, all in simple designs.

HISTORY: The first fire stations in the mid-C19 were in the Gothic style typical of Victorian municipal buildings. The 1880s saw a move towards bolder architectural statements with applied decoration and compositional quirkiness. It was the building boom of the 1890s - 1900s, however, that was to transform fire station architecture and give the Brigade its most characterful buildings. By 1889 the Fire Brigade was part of London County Council and from 1896 new stations were designed by a group of architects led by Owen Fleming and Charles Canning Winmill, both formerly of the LCC Housing Department. They brought the highly-experimental methods which had evolved for designing new social housing to the Fire Brigade Division, as the department was called from 1899, and drew on a huge variety of influences to create unique and commanding stations, often built to a bespoke design and plan. Some of the stations built in this period retained the arrangement of earlier stations, whereby accommodation for firemen was in flats above the appliance bays, accessed via external balconies from a projecting central staircase bay. Yet while derivative in plan, the treatment of the façades of these stations was always distinctive. Brixton is an excellent example, where the monumental Edwardian Baroque style is deployed to great effect. It indicates the civic character of Brixton that had developed towards the end of the C19, when the area became a popular shopping centre and the location for a Tate Library and Lambeth Town Hall (both Grade II). This station at Brixton replaced an earlier station at Ferndale Road, which still survives. It was formally declared open by the Chairman of the Fire Brigade Committee on 26 July 1906.

SOURCES: 'New Fire Station for Brixton', Fire and Water (September, 1906), 101 Historic photographs held by the London Fire Brigade Museum Andrew Saint, 'London's Architecture and the London Fire Brigade, 1866-1938' (Heinz Gallery RIBA, Exhibition Catalogue, 1981) John B Nadal, London's Fire Stations (Huddersfield, 2006) Will Reading, 'L.C.C. Fire Stations, 1896-1916, their History, Condition and Future Use' (Architectural Association, Graduate School, 2007)

REASONS FOR DESIGNATION: Brixton Fire Station is listed at Grade II for the following principal reasons: * of special architectural interest as one of a remarkable series of fire stations built by the LCC between 1896-1914, each executed to a bespoke design, which are widely admired as being among the most accomplished achievements of this exceptionally rich and prolific period of LCC civic architecture; * of special architectural interest for its imposing Edwardian Baroque façade, created through the use of rusticated stone cladding and classical features, which connects the station with the emerging civic identity of Brixton; * the subtle softening of this effect through the gently-projecting canted bays, tall chimneys and fine brickwork creates a design of considerable character, and indicates the station's historic function as a home for fire-fighters, as well as a municipal building; * It exhibits the quality of materials and attention to detail which are the hallmarks of LCC design.

Legacy

The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.

Legacy System number:
434018
Legacy System:
LBS

Sources

Books and journals
Saint, A, Londons Architecture and the London Fire Brigade 1866-1938, (1981)
Nadal, J, Londons Fire Stations, (2006)
Reading, W, L C C Fire Stations 1896-1916 their History, Condition and Future Use, (2007)
Fire and Water in September - New Fire Station for Brixton, (1906)

Legal

This building is listed under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended for its special architectural or historic interest.

Ordnance survey map of Brixton Fire Station

Map

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End of official list entry

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