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© Dr Neil Bentham
IoE Number:
380752
Location:
BRISTOL GRAMMAR SCHOOL, UNIVERSITY ROAD (north side)
BRISTOL, BRISTOL, BRISTOL
Photographer:
Dr Neil Bentham
Date Photographed:
16 March 2006
Date listed:
04 March 1977
Date of last amendment:
04 March 1977
Grade
II
The Images of England website consists of images of listed buildings based on the statutory list as it was in 2001 and does not incorporate subsequent amendments to the list. For the statutory list and information on the current listed status of individual buildings please go to The National Heritage List for England.
BRISTOL
ST5873SW UNIVERSITY ROAD
901-1/10/310 (North West side)
04/03/77 Bristol Grammar School
II
School. 1879. By Foster and Wood. Extended 1909 by Sir Frank
Wills, and 1914 by WV Gough. Red rubble with limestone
dressings and a slate roof. 1879 Great Hall, with 1909 block
across its S end and 1914 block across the W end of the
latter.
Great Hall 2 storeys; 9-window range. A symmetrical block
articulated by buttresses, with central projecting entrance
and stair blocks each side; moulded sill and first-floor drip
courses, cornice with gargoyles, and crenellated parapet and
stepped gables. N entrance block has diagonal buttresses,
Tudor-arched doorway with splayed panelled reveals and a
panelled 2-leaf door, and a label with head stops and foliate
spandrels. 2 storey canted oriel above has a moulded base, a
central traceried panel and flanking statue niches with canted
canopies, and a crenellated top.
To the right is a narrow square 3-stage stair turret. 3-light
mullion and transom flat-headed ground-floor windows with ogee
heads, Tudor-arched first-floor windows with Perpendicular
tracery. Rear matching gabled stair block, with a tower capped
by a good wrought-iron canopy with a square ogee copper roof.
The end gables have large 4-centre arched windows with
Perpendicular tracery, angel label stops, and a gabled cornice
below the parapet.
The 1909 block has a road front with 3 gables to the left of
an entrance tower, containing a Tudor-arched door, tall
first-floor Tudor-arched mullion and transom window, and a
Lombard frieze to a stepped parapet with raised corners. To
the right is a 6-bay range divided by buttresses to mullion
and transom windows.
The 1914 cross wing is 6 bays long, articulated by buttresses
with crenellated square tops above the parapet, first-floor
windows with Tudor-arched heads, and end gables with tall
central first-floor windows with elliptical-arched heads and
Perpendicular tracery.
INTERIOR: traceried glazed entrance screen to a central stair
hall, a rear Imperial stair with stone parapet, and
wrought-iron upper balusters with a brass rail; Great Hall on
first floor has an arch-braced king post roof, with through
purlins and pointed wind braces to the lower bays, with
attached shafts to large angel corbels holding shields;
panelled lower walls containing raised seats with canopies;
over the entrance is the organ loft. The original building
contained the Great Hall as well as 9 classrooms.