Details
TO 27 SW KINGSTON-UPON-THAMES COOMBE LANE WEST
(east side) 2/51 No. 187 (Coombe Cottage) GV II House, now offices. Built 1863 and extended 1870-4 by George Devey
for E. C. Baring, the banker. Red brick with purple brick diaper work;
weatherboarded gables; gabled Welsh slate roof; brick stacks. Pictur-
esque neo-vernacular style. Asymmetrical plan and 2-storey elevations.
Main west elevation has 3-stage tower with staircase projection to
right; flat brick arches over casement windows; moulded brick cornice
and battlemented parapet. To front of this tower is a half-glazed
door set in moulded basket-arched architrave, and porch with wood
mullions to glazed panels, a coved pilaster cornice, and a parapet
with late C17-style balustrade. To left of porch are 4 asymmetrically-
planned gabled projections which, from nearest to the porch, have
quatrefoil gable light, square bay window with double-gabled roof,
and, finally, a square bay window; 3 gables nearest porch have weather-
boarding, all have bargeboards and wood-mullioned and transomed windows,
and gable to left has segmental brick tympanum arches over openings.
Range in neo-Tudor style to right of porch, with 2-storey bays facing
west and east and 5 bay south elevation with gabled fronts to east
and west cross wings, all with label moulds over chamfered stone-
mullioned windows. East elevation has 4 gables to centre, with barge-
boards, weatherboarded upper gables, and weatherboarded jettied first
floor to right with chamfered wood quoin blocks; splayed oriel window
with similar treatment to left; flat brick arches over wood-mullioned
and transomed casements. Short brick screen wall with keystone to
elliptical-arched doorway connects multi-gabled range to 4-stage tower
on right, which has similar casement windows having moulded brick
string courses and cornice, and similar shaped floating cornices over
ground and first-floor windows. Interior noted as having original
Devey doors, panelling and staircase. This house is one of Devey's
earliest commissions and its early use of the neo-vernacular style
anticipates the later work of Shaw and Webb. (M. Girouard, The Victorian Country House, 1971, pp. 178, 197). (1 of 2)
Listing NGR: TQ2151970062
Legacy
The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.
Legacy System number:
203205
Legacy System:
LBS
Sources
Books and journals Girouard, M, The Victorian Country House, (1971), 178+197
Legal
This building is listed under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended for its special architectural or historic interest.
End of official list entry
Print the official list entry