Listed Building record TQ 64 SW 94 - THE CLOCK HOUSE

Summary

Grade II listed building. Main construction periods 1833 to 1980

Location

Grid reference TQ 6444 4476 (point)
Map sheet TQ64SW
District TUNBRIDGE WELLS, KENT
Civil Parish CAPEL, TUNBRIDGE WELLS, KENT

Map

Type and Period (1)

Full Description

The following text is from the original listed building designation:
TQ 64 SW CAPEL SYCHEM LANE, FIVE OAK GREEN
5/285 The Clock House 9.5.90
GV II
House, formerly a coach house with summerhouse above. Mid/late C19, converted to a house circa 1970. Flemish bond red brick; brick stacks and chimneyshafts; slate roof to main house, peg-tile roof to turret.
Plan: Originally this was built as a coach house facing north west. Above it was a single large room, a summerhouse heated by a stack in the left (north east) end wall, a balcony on the front and picturesque oriel window turret projecting from the right end wall. Circa 1970 the building was converted to a dwelling and both floors were then subdivided. The central axial stack dates'from this conversion. 2 storeys.
Exterior: Deliberately picturesque elevation in the High Victorian style. 2- window front. At ground floor level a C20 doorway and window occupy the position of the former coach house entrance. The lintel which was originally over the coach house double doors still remains. At first floor level 2 original glazed French windows onto the timber balcony which is carried on a series of joists with shaped ends. Tented zinc roof with shaped timber vallance is supported on rustic posts and trellis-work under the handrail. Plain deep eaves and tall roof is hipped both ends. It contains a gabled dormer with shaped bargeboards, finial and pendant, but this is not a window; it contains a clockface. To right at ground floor level a stone plaque is set into the wall and it is inscribed with the initials CAB, PC, PM and RAC along with a freemasonry motif. This end the corner is rounded and contains a window on each floor, both with Tudor-style hoodmoulds. The first floor window is an original horned 10/6-pane sash window but the ground floor one is a C20 window which replaced a former doorway there. Further round on the right end wall is an ornamental oriel window turret serving the first floor. It is a boarded timber-framed structure, circular in plan and resting on a pair of shaped timber brackets. Its tall and narrow windows have glazing bars only at the top. It rises above the eaves to a square-plan bellcote-like structre with open sides and wavy headed bays. Above a modillion eaves cornice deep eaves carry a splayed spire-like roof. The original stack on the opposite end wall has an original tall octagonal chimneypot. To rear the roof is half-hipped. Below the ground floor has been altered; a carriageway entrance has been blocked and C20 windows put in but at first floor level there are 2 more original horned 10/6 sash windows with Tudor-style hoodmoulds.
The Clock House forms part of a picturesque group of buildings with Lydd Farmhouse (q.v.) and its outbuildings.
Listing NGR: TQ6444844753


English Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest (Map). SKE16160.

Sources/Archives (1)

  • --- Map: English Heritage. List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest.

Finds (0)

Protected Status/Designation

Related Monuments/Buildings (0)

Related Events/Activities (0)

Record last edited

Feb 19 2008 12:26PM