Listed Building record TQ 64 SW 94 - THE CLOCK HOUSE
Summary
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)
- --- SKE16160 Map: English Heritage. List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest.
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Record last edited
Feb 19 2008 12:26PM