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Lancashire >
Lancaster > Alexandra Hotel
Alexandra Hotel
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The Alexandra Hotel was situated on
Penny Street. This pub closed in February 2016, by which time is was known
as The Revolution. |
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Source: Simon Armstrong |
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Listed
building details: |
Hotel. Dated 1902. Probably by Austin and
Paley, in a Northern Renaissance style. Sandstone ashlar, and slate roofs
with prominent chimney stacks in various positions. Deep L-shaped plan on
the corner with Thurnham Street. The main entrance is to Penny Street, with
secondary entrances to Thurnham Street, where the facade is symmetrical.
Three storeys and eight bays on Penny Street, with five bays to Thurnham
Street. There are bands above the plinth and between ground and first
floors, and a sill band and cornice on the first floor; this runs all around
with two flush bands of red sandstone above. All windows have segmental
heads. The facade to Thurnham Street has a wide centre, projecting slightly
between raised quoins and containing a two storey canted bay window whose
three lights have rusticated segmental lintels; above is a tall Dutch gable,
flanked by octagonal turrets and containing a pair of similar windows, set
between pilasters and under a segmental cornice. On either side is a lower
three storey bay, the one to the left containing an entrance under a canopy
bearing the name 'ALEXANDRA HOTEL' in stained glass, followed by a two
storey bay which is canted back. On the left this elevation links to the
Penny Street frontage and has, on the first floor, under a low strapwork
gable, a mullioned and transomed window with stone balcony.
The Penny Street facade culminates on the right in a tall gabled bay,
generally similar to the one on Thurnham Street except that it contains on
the ground floor a canopied doorway, like that on Thurnham Street, and
flanked by two narrow windows. On the far left this facade has on the ground
floor two altered shop fronts, with a centrally-placed canted oriel between
the two windows above. The central two bays have on the ground floor a
doorway leading to the Alexandra Hall on the first floor and a window, with
two pairs of transomed windows under arched hoodmoulds on the first floor,
and two pairs of windows on the second floor.
INTERIOR: the Hall has seven bays, articulated by semi-octagonal pilasters
and free Corinthian capitals, with an apse at the east end, and a
barrel-vaulted ceiling carried on ribs with heavily moulded plasterwork. |
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