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Upper Belgrave Lodge

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OS grid reference
  
SJ 406 609

Reference no.
  
1136146

Designated as world heritage site
  
2 November 1983

Built
  
1877–79

Architectural style
  
Jacobethan

Architect
  
John Douglas

Upper Belgrave Lodge

Location
  
Belgrave Avenue, Eaton Hall, Cheshire, England

Built for
  
1st Duke of Westminster

Similar
  
Coronation Chair, St Paul's Church - Boughton, Dutch Tea House - Eaton Hall, St Mary's Church - Tilston, St Chad's Church - Over

Upper Belgrave Lodge is a house at the east end of Belgrave Avenue, the road connecting the B5445 road between Chester and Wrexham, and Eaton Hall, Cheshire, England. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building.

Contents

History

The lodge was built in 1877–79 and designed by the Chester architect John Douglas. The patron was the 1st Duke of Westminster.

Architecture

The house is built in a T-plan with 1½ storeys in Jacobethan style. It is constructed in red brick with scattered sandstone blocks; the hipped roofs are tiled and have terracotta finials. The upper storey of the main part of the house is timber framed and jettied with pargeting in the panels; the gable end contains a four-light window and above this is tile hanging. Under the gable is a carved bressumer. To the west is an oak-framed porch on a sandstone plinth. The doorway has a Tudor arch above which is a pargeted panel. The rear wing is single-storeyed.

References

Upper Belgrave Lodge Wikipedia