ZE7 Lippitts Hill: Long Range
Long Range Adjoining Officers Accommodation, Metropolitant Police Cadet Training Centre, Lippitts Hill, Loughton, IG10 4AL
Listed on the National Heritage List for England. Search over 400,000 listed places
Overview
- Heritage Category:
- Listed Building
- Grade:
- II
- List Entry Number:
- 1390668
- Date first listed:
- 27-Feb-2003
- List Entry Name:
- ZE7 Lippitts Hill: Long Range
- Statutory Address:
- Long Range Adjoining Officers Accommodation, Metropolitant Police Cadet Training Centre, Lippitts Hill, Loughton, IG10 4AL
Location
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Discover moreOfficial list entry
- Heritage Category:
- Listed Building
- Grade:
- II
- List Entry Number:
- 1390668
- Date first listed:
- 27-Feb-2003
- Date of most recent amendment:
- 17-Aug-2017
- List Entry Name:
- ZE7 Lippitts Hill: Long Range
- Statutory Address 1:
- Long Range Adjoining Officers Accommodation, Metropolitant Police Cadet Training Centre, Lippitts Hill, Loughton, IG10 4AL
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.
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.
Location
- Statutory Address:
- Long Range Adjoining Officers Accommodation, Metropolitant Police Cadet Training Centre, Lippitts Hill, Loughton, IG10 4AL
The building or site itself may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.
- County:
- Essex
- District:
- Epping Forest (District Authority)
- Parish:
- Waltham Abbey
- National Grid Reference:
- TQ3973496986
Summary
Former accommodation range built 1939-40 by the War Office.
Reasons for Designation
The Long Range, one of a group of buildings erected pre-1940 by the War Office as part of the supporting infrastructure for military personnel serving the ZE7 Lippitts Hill Heavy Anti-Aircraft (HAA) gun emplacement is listed for the following principal reasons:
Architectural interest:
* As a near complete example of a Second World War accommodation block which survives close to its original form and within its original context, the best preserved anti-aircraft gun site in England;
Historic interest:
* As an integral component of one of Britain's premier HAA gun sites of the Second World War, a nationally important military site which retains evidence of continuity and change in the use of the site from World War Two to the end of the Cold War;
* As a key component of the site which served the first American troops to fire in the defence of London during the Second World War;
Group value:
* For its strong group value with the other accommodation units, the HAA gun emplacement, the AAOR, the Concrete Sculpture of a Man and the Monument to US servicemen which collectively allow a thorough appreciation of the war time operation and chart the subsequent development of the nationally important military site.
History
Until just before the Second World War the site of Lippitts Hill, currently a Police Training Camp, was a rural setting of open fields bordered by the Owl public house and Pipers Farm on the east side. The 1882 1:2,500 Ordnance Survey map shows a series of enclosed medieval fields on the site. By January 1940 a Heavy Anti-Aircraft battery known as ZE7 Lippitts Hill had been constructed to guard the eastern approaches of London. War Office documents record that the battery was operational in January 1940, and by January 1943 the battery was manned by American troops under the command of Major M F J Emanuel. In March 1944 Battery B, 184th Anti-Aircraft Artillery, equipped with Mark 1, 90mm guns, became the first American crew to fire in the defence of London.
In late 1944, the Americans moved to France and the site was converted by the British into a Prisoner of War camp. A reminder of this phase of use still exists on site today in the form of a concrete sculpture of a man carved by prisoner Rudi Weber in 1946 (NHLE 1390665). The Prisoner of War camp was closed in 1948. Sometime in 1951, or shortly afterwards, a Cold War Anti-Aircraft Operation Room (AAOR) was built on the site. It acted as a control centre for a number of anti-aircraft guns protecting the north of London. By 1956, with the advent of high flying jet bombers and evolving missile technology this role was obsolete and the system was abandoned.
In 1960, the site became a Metropolitan Police Training Area, a function retained until 2003. Following the murder of three police officers in West London in 1966, it was used as a centre for training police officers in the use of guns, although the construction of a new pistol firing range was not approved until 1973. From 1976 Lippitts Hill became a base for police helicopters, which were loaned from the Army and operated over London. However, in 1980, faced by a change in flight requirements, the Metropolitan Police purchased their own aircraft, and in November that year the Metropolitan Police Air Support Unit was officially launched and based at Lippitts Hill. Changes to the Metropolitan Police area in 2000 placed Lippitts Hill, and the surrounding area under Essex Police. The helicopter unit joined the National Police Air Service (NPAS) in 2014.
The subject of this case is The Long Range adjoining Officers Accommodation Block built in 1939-40 by the War Office as part of the supporting infrastructure for military personnel serving the ZE7 Lippitts Hill HAA gun emplacement. Other buildings in this group include The Spider Block (NHLE 1390667), Commander's Office (NHLE 1390666), Officers Accommodation (NHLE1390669), Office and Chapel Building (NHLE 1390671), Mess Block (NHLE 1390670) and a K6 Telephone Kiosk (NHLE 1390664) all of which are listed at Grade II. The Armoury is not currently listed but is being considered for listing as part of this case.
The configuration of the building has been altered slightly by the addition of a doorway in the northern gable in the late C20, possibly at the same time as a door in the east-elevation was blocked. Some internal partitions have been added to create a simulation of the interior of an aeroplane for the purposes of police training exercises.
Details
Building: former accommodation range built 1939-40 by the War Office. Now used for police training exercises.
Materials: this timber-framed and weather-boarded, single-storey range stands on regularly spaced brick piers, has metal framed casement windows and a felted shallow pitched timber roof.
Plan: rectangular in plan.
Exterior: a single storey, eleven bay building supported on a series of brick piers with a shallow pitched, felted roof. It is timber framed and weather-boarded, accessed via a plain, single panel timber door in each gable end, another at the southern end of the east elevation and two in the west elevation. Each bay, with the exception of those with doors and the second bay of the east elevation where a former door has been blocked, are marked by original, multi-paned metal-framed windows. Slightly smaller but similar windows are positioned in the gables. The position of the blocked doorway is marked by a set of three concrete steps.
Interior: the interior is utilitarian with tongue and groove wainscoting to window height surviving around the interior of the external walls. All the windows appear original and retain the 1940s ‘crittal’ style window furniture. Most rooms are open to the roof with exposed king-post trusses and timber panelled roof. Where this isn’t the case, suspended ceilings have been inserted. Stud partitions have been used to subdivide the space for police training exercises but the main structure remains virtually unaltered. Where doors survive they comprise one-over-three panel timber doors.
Legacy
The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.
- Legacy System number:
- 491082
- Legacy System:
- LBS
Sources
Books and journals
Dobinson, C S, Twentieth Century Fortifications in England: Volume 1.3, (1996)
Nash, F, World War Two Heavy Anti-Aircraft Gun Sites in Essex, (1998)
, Foot, W., Army Camps: Survival English Heritage Project, (November 2005)
Turley Heritage, , Heritage Appraisal NPAS Site (Metropolitan Police) Lippitts Hill , (November 2015)
Other
Aerial Photograph RAF CPE-UK 1779-3141 (1946)
Aerial Photograph August, FAF 58-774-5190 (1951)
Legal
This building is listed under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended for its special architectural or historic interest.
Map
This map is for quick reference purposes only and may not be to scale. This copy shows the entry on 09-Jun-2026 at 16:55:34.
Download a full scale map (PDF)End of official list entry
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