English Heritage maintain a "List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest". The information presented in the table below is for those buildings listed in the Borough of Worthing.
If you are considering undertaking any work to a Listed Building it is likely that you will need Listed Building Consent, in addition to any other permissions or approvals and you are advised to contact Planning and Building Control for advice. Please also see Listed Buildings - A Guide for further information
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| Address | Name | Description | Grade | Listing Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alfred Place (21 and 23) | - | ALFRED PLACE 1. 5406 (North Side) Nos 21 and 23 TQ 1502 NW 5/138 II GV 2. Early C19. A pair of terrace houses. 2 storeys. Stucco-fronted. Steep slate roof. Single window, with sashes in No 23 but converted to casements in No 25. Plain straight hoods over ground and 1st floor windows of No 23. Right hand doorways. round-headed with semi-circular lights, and shallow porch in form of ogee arch. Nos 21 to 27 (odd) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1528902617 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Alfred Place (25 and 27) | - | ALFRED PLACE 1. 5406 (North Side) Nos 25 and 27 TQ 1502 NW 5/139 II GV 2. Early C19. A pair of terrace cottages, similar to Nos 21 and 23 but smaller. No 27 being the end of the row. 2 storeys and attic. Stucco-fronted. Steep slate roof with decorative tile cresting. One sash window each. A dormer each but abutting to form one unit (of later date). Right-hand doors with shallow porches in form of ogee arches. Nos 21 to 27 (odd) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1529802619 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Ambrose Place (1 to 14 consec.) | INCLUDING SECTIONS OF RAILINGS ALONG THE FRONT | AMBROSE PLACE 1. 5406 (North Side) Nos 1 to 14 (consec.) including sections of railings along the front TQ 1402 NE 3/23 11.10.49. II GV 2. Between 1814 and 1824. Built by Ambrose Cartright. 3 storeys and basement, with area. 2 windows each. Stuccoed. Cornice and parapet. Wooden balconies with canopy on 1st floor, the balconies supported by 4 slender columns to each house. Nos 6, 12 and 13 retain their original trellised wooden porches which fill the space between the 2 right hand columns in these houses. The other doorways which have not been altered have fluted frames and very narrow rectangular fanlights. Apart from the porches, only Nos 1, 2, 6, 7 and 10 to 14 have their facades more or less as originally built. Nos 3, 5 and 9 have had later iron balconies substituted for the wooden ones. No 4 has had a bay on the 2nd floor and an extra storey added. No 5 lacks a storey, and No 8 has had a later bay added on ground and 1st floor and also a porch. No 14 is quite different from the other houses, being bow fronted with an iron hooded balcony, Doric pilasters above this, arcading to 2nd floor windows, an attic storey with dormer windows behind the parapet, and a porch with Doric columns, but the house is original and not altered. Most of the houses have cast iron railings along the pavement and to either side of the front space and basement areas. All have finials of javelin form, but some are of lighter scale than others. No 1 has light railings along the east only (with a fluted terminal post); No 4 heavy railings to the front and west; No 5 has railings decorated with anthemions etc, to the steps; Nos 5 and 8 have heavy railings to the front; No 8 to the right also; Nos 9 and 10 have light railings to the front and west, and fluted posts at the angles and entrances; No 12 has heavy railings to east and west and fluted angle and entrance posts; No 14 has heavy railings to the front, east (with gap) and west and 4 piers with elliptical caps. Nos 1 to 15 form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1477002823 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Ambrose Place (15) | - | AMBROSE PLACE 1. 5406 (North Side) TQ 1402 W 3/125 No 15 II GV 2. A pair of houses forming the west end of the terrace. 3 storeys. Stucco-fronted. Projecting eaves on paired enriched brackets. Two rectangular bays with 3 windows, with a single window between, all sashes with glazing bars. 2nd and 3rd floor windows are of equal size. Ground floor single window is blind. Door on right of 6 moulded panels within a porch formed of an entablature with hearty dentilled cornice supported by slender pilasters. The steps leading to this have decorative iron railings. There is also a short section of railings along the east part of the frontage. This item is included mainly for group value. Nos 1 to 15 form a group. In the descriptive notes for the above entry, the first sentence should be amended to read: 'Building forming the west end of the terrace.' ------------------------------------------------------------------------- AMBROSE PLACE 1. 5406 (North Side) No 15 TQ 1402 NE 3/125 II GV 2. A pair of houses forming the west end of the terrace. 3 storeys. Stucco-fronted. Projecting eaves on paired enriched brackets. Two rectangular bays with 3 windows, with a single window between, all sashes with glazing bars. 2nd and 3rd floor windows are of equal size. Ground floor single window is blind. Door on right of 6 moulded panels within a porch formed of an entablature with heavy, dentilled cornice supported by slender pilasters. The steps leading to this have decorative iron railings. There is also a short section of railings along the east part of the frontage. This item is included mainly for group. Nos 1 to 15 form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1472502810 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Ann Street | BUILDING AT REAR OF NUMBER 35 WARWICK STREET | ANN STREET 1. 5406 (South Side) TQ 1502 SW 5/36 Nos 12 and 14 The above entry shall be amended to read: ANN STREET (South Side) Building at rear of No 35 Warwick Street (formerly Nos 12 and 14 Ann Street) ANN STREET 1. 5406 (South Side) Nos 12 and 14 TQ 1502 NW 5/36 II 2. Early C19. 2 storeys. 3 windows. Stuccoed. Wide pilasters and arcading over 1st floor windows. 2 doors together with large fanlight over both. Listing NGR: TQ1504202659 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Ann Street (8) | - | ANN STREET 1. 5406 (South Side) No 8 TQ 1502 NW 5/137 II 2. Early C19. 3 storeys. One sash window, with glazing bars. Good quality brickwork of grey headers with red dressings. Recessed left-hand doorway, with 6-panel door. Listing NGR: TQ1503202660 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Ardsheal Road (19) | INCLUDING GARDEN WALL TO EAST | ARDSHEAL ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) Broadwater No 19, including garden wall to east TQ 1404 16/202 II 2. C18. Symmetrical detached cottage abutting the road at right-angles. 2 storeys. Painted brick. Modillion eaves cornice. Steep renewed tile roof. Gable chimneys. East front: 2 sash windows, of equal size on the 2 floors but the lower with cambered heads. Low cobble wall to front garden. Listing NGR: TQ1439304564 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Arundel Road | 12 CASTLE GORING | In the entry for ARUNDEL ROAD TQ 10 NW (South Side) 23/216 No 12 (The Cottage) GV II the address shall be amended to read ARUNDEL ROAD (South Side) No 12 Castle Goring Cottages ------------------------------------ ARUNDEL ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) No 12 (The Cottage) TQ 10 NW 23/216 II GV 2. Probably late C18. A long narrow 2-storey range with steep tiled roof. Rendered. Either side of lean-to porch on slender wooden posts (over doorway with light above) are a 3-light casement window on the upper storey and a 6-light casement bay window on the lower storey (the latter with lattice glazing bars). There is also a 2-light casement window between the porch and the left-hand bay. To the right, and beyond the ridge chimney, a section perhaps added later with a single-light casement on each floor. Nos 8, 9, 10, 12 and 13 form a group, of which Nos 8, 9, and 10 are of local interest only. Listing NGR: TQ1054805623 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Arundel Road | CASTLE GORING | ARUNDEL ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) Castle Goring TQ 10 NW 23/71 11.10.49. I 2. Built by Shelley's grandfather, Sir Bysshe Shelley, about 1797-8. The south front is in Palladian style, the north front Gothic, though both were built at the same date. 3 storeys. 5 windows to each front and flanking pavilion on each side. The Palladian front was designed by Biagio Rebecca and is said to be a copy of a villa near Rome. It is of yellow brick. The centre portion of 3 windows projects slightly with stuccoed Ionic pilasters and entablature and pediment with the Shelley arms in tympanum. Sculptured Coade stone panels dated 1797 and 1798 between lst and 2nd floor windows. The rest of the front has a cornice continued from the centre portion of the house and parapet above, and 1st floor windows in arcading with arched panels over and balustrading beneath. On ground floor portico with 6 fluted Doric columns in front of 3 central windows with 2 flights of curved staircase on either side with iron hand rail. Above balcony with similar iron railing in front of the piano nobile. Large pavilion or wing at east and west ends, the former containing the kitchen and dairy and communicating with the house, the latter containing the original stables and only joined to the house by a connecting wall with a door through it. These pavilions have curved ends with stuccoed Ionic columns, entablature and pseudo-castellated parapet. The Gothic front is of flint and sandstone. Centre and ends project slightly. Square tower in centre, castellated parapet at ends. Large recessed porch in centre. This front of the pavilions is also gothicised. The stables have 2 round turrets, the kitchen a large perpendicular style window. Curved wooden staircase inside, lit by glass dome in centre of the house which is not visible from either front outside. Listing NGR: TQ1024205654 | I | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Arundel Road | THE COTTAGE 1 CASTLE GORING MEWS | In the entry for ARUNDEL ROAD TQ 10 NW (South Side) 23/70 No 13 GV II the address shall be amended to read ARUNDEL ROAD (South Side) No 13 Castle Goring Cottages ------------------------------------ ARUNDEL ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) No 13 TQ 10 NW 23/70 II GV Late C18. 2 storeys. 3 windows and 1 blocked. Grey headers with red brick dressings. Small cornice with modillions below eaves. Red tiled roof. Small flat hood to door. 6-panel door. Nos 8, 9, 10, 12 and 13 form a group, of which Nos 8, 9, and 10 are of local interest only. Listing NGR: TQ1050805624 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Arundel Road | WALLED GARDEN AT CASTLE GORING | TQ 10 NW WORTHING ARUNDEL ROAD 753/23/10016 Walled Garden at Castle Goring II Walled garden with attached outbuildings. Early C19. Rectangle approximately 90 x 55 metres of red brick in Flemish bond with back headers. About 12 feet high with brick pilasters at regular intervals and stone coping. On north side are lean-to outbuildings in pebble with red brick dressings and slate roof, probably potting shed and gardeners' bothy and on the other side of this wall facing south late C19 glasshouses. The north wall has flues, probably for heating. Listing NGR: TQ1046205239 | II | 06-MAY-1997 |
| Arundel Road | STANHOPE LODGE AND STANHOPE STORE | TQ 10 NE WORTHING ARUNDEL ROAD 23/10021 Stanhope Lodge And Stanhope Store 20.9.84 II STANHOPE LODGE WAS FIRST LISTED ON 20 SEPTEMBER 1984 AND WAS THEN INCLUDED IN THE TWENTY THIRD LIST FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARUN IN THE PARISH OF CLAPHAM. House and outbuilding, probably originally a stable, now in separate ownership. Stanhope Lodge has an C18 north west wing and early C19 south east wing. Stanhope Store is late C18 or early C19. Stanhope Lodge is of red brick in English bond to north west wing and Flemish bond with blue brick headers to south east with tiled roof and end brick chimneystacks. Two storeys with 3 horizontally sliding casements to north west with cambered head linings to ground floor, central doorway in moulded architrave surround with projecting cornice on console brackets and double doors to right hand ground floor probably originally housing carriage. C19 clockface to extreme right. South east wing is set back addition of one bay with sash window with horns and C20 garage doors. Rear elevation has 5 sash windows. Stanhope Store is a one storey outbuilding attached to the right of Stanhope Lodge in flint with red brick lacing courses and tiled roof. --------------------------------- The entry for Stanhope Lodge, Arundel Road, Clapham has been deleted from the twenty third list for the District of Arun by virtue of the twenty ninth amendment. -------------------------------- Listing NGR: TQ1101105663 | II | 20-SEP-1984 |
| Arundel Road | COACH AND HORSES PUBLIC HOUSE | TQ 10 NW WORTHING ARUNDEL ROAD 23/10010 Coach and Horses Public House GV II Public house. Early to mid C18, refronted in early to mid C19 with C20 addition to side. Ground floor painted brick, first floor slate hung. Tiled roof with ridge tiles and end painted brick chimneystacks. Original part two storeys and attics in gable end; three windows. Twelve pane sashes and central C18 six fielded panelled door with pedimented hood and console brackets concealed under C20 glazed porch. Left side one storey bar extension with twelve pane sashes is converted former outbuilding. C 19 gabled extension to rear and C20 flat roofed extension to right side. Interior has chamfered spine beam. Listing NGR: TQ1098605659 | II | 28-MAR-1996 |
| Arundel Road | 14 CASTLE GORING | In the entry for ARUNDEL ROAD TQ 10 NW (South Side) 23/217 No 14 GV II the address shall be amended to read ------------------------------------ ARUNDEL ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) No 14 TQ 10 NW 23/217 II 2. Probably C18. A detached cottage of red brick with grey headers. Steep tiled roof with gable chimneys. 3 not quite symmetrically-placed casement windows, the centre one 2-light, the others 3-light. The ground floor windows have cambered heads, the upper ones timber; all have possibly original metal frames with leaded panes. Central doorway within plain gabled porch. The building is reinforced with buttresses and several tie rods with circular discs. Interior has rough-hewn ceiling timbers. Listing NGR: TQ1038805621 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Arundel Road | THE LODGE OF CASTLE GORING | TQ10NW WORTHING ARUNDEL ROAD TQ 10 NW (South Side) 11/27 The Lodge of Castle Goring. Slightly later in date than the house and probably built by the first occupant of the house, Admiral Sir George Brook Pechell, one of the first Members of Parliament for Brighton, about 1830. One storey. Two windows. Faced with flints with stuccoed quoins. Slate roof. Casement windows latticed panes. Gable end to each wing with scalloped bargeboards. | II | - |
| Ashacre Lane (54) | THE OLD COTTAGE | ASHACRE LANE 1. 5406 (South Side) Durrington The Old Cottage TQ 1205 10/173 GV II 2. Probably late C18. 2 storeys. Flint with brick dressings. Slate roof. Gable chimneys. 2 widely-spaced windows (modern casements above; sashes of Victorian type below). Central door. Extension in the form of second span at the east end. Listing NGR: TQ1292405088 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Ashacre Lane (79) | WALNUT TREE COTTAGE | ASHACRE LANE 1. 5406 (South Side) Durrington Walnut Tree Cottage TQ 1205 10/79 11.10.49. GV II 2. Dated 1762. Flints with red brick dressings and stringcourse. Small cornice with modillions placed slantways below eaves. Red tiled roof. Listing NGR: TQ1297005057 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Ashacre Lane (87) | THE OLD HOUSE | TQ 1205 WORTHING ASHACRE LANE 10/78 Number 54 (even) 11.10.49 The Old House GV II House. Probable C15 open hall, ceiled over and chimney inserted in early C17 when a parlour wing was added to the east, extensively restored circa 1911. Timber-framed building refronted in flint and render with roof mainly tiled but front slope of roof to original wing retaining Horsham stone slabs. Channelled brick stack to centre of original wing, external brick and flint stack to east of parlour wing and probable C18 brick stack to rear range. L-shaped plan. Two storeys, with attics to parlour wing; 5 windows. Front has former hall house of 3 bays to left. Three gabled dormers and three casement windows, all with early C20 leaded lights. Projecting parlour wing to right has gable hung with plain and fishscale tiles, 1;2;1 casements with leaded lights and early C20 porch on slender wooden columns and four panelled door. Rear elevation has circa 1911 gabled projection forming stair turret, two storey C17 or C18 service wing to right with one storey offices at end. Three leaded light casements. Interior has crownpost roof to original open hall with curved tiebeam, octagonal crown post with 4 headbraces, collar beam and rafters. The square crownpost to the smaller bedroom has a collar beam which is a reused beam from the top of a wallplate retaining the notches of the rafters. Ground floor has dining room with early C17 cross beams with 2 inch chamfers with lambstongue stops, c1911 stone fireplace and wooden panelling. Sitting room has open fireplace with moulded bressumer with crane marks and 2 salt recesses, but the seats and arched doorcases are early C20. Chamfered spine beam supported on wooden corbel. A series of plank doors probably assembled c1911 out of older floorboards. Parlour wing shows few visible signs of early C17 origin apart from a chamfered beam with lambs tongue stop on the first floor. The attic floor of this wing is boarded over. Old sales particulars indicate that this property was known as Cutler's House in 1795 and was later subdivided into three cottages. Later it became a farmhouse but was restored in 1911 and became a residence. Listing NGR: TQ1298605094 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Bath Place (4) | - | BATH PLACE 1. 5406 (East Side) No 4 TQ 1402 SE 4/157 II GV 2. Early C19. 3 storeys and attic. Part of the scheme of Nos 5 to 8. 3-light bay window and right-hand blind window. Modern shopfront and right-hand door. Modillion eaves cornice below slate roof. Victorian balcony to let floor of bay, with decorated iron railings. One dormer window. Stuccoed. Nos 4 to 8 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1489802419 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Bath Place (5) | - | BATH PLACE 1. 5406 (East Side) No 5 TQ 1402 SE 4/13 11.10.49. II GV 2. Early C19. 3 storeys and attic. One bow window of 3 lights. Stuccoed. Cornice with modillions. One dormer. Wooden balcony on 1st floor. Glazing bars intact. Round-headed doorway up 6 steps. Nos 4 to 8 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1489602424 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Bath Place (6 to 8 consec.) | - | BATH PLACE 1. 5406 (East Side) Nos 6 to 8 (consec.) TQ 1402 SE 4/156 II GV 2. Early C19. 3 terraced houses, forming part of scheme with Nos 4 and 5. 3 storeys and attic. A 3-light bay window to each house, alternately bowed (ie No 7). No 7 has glazing bars, but not original sashes. Elsewhere Victorian sashes or modern windows. No 8 has added decorative tiles between storeys of bays, and no right-hand door as the others have. All have modern shopfronts, and modillion eaves cornice below slate roofs, with one dormer (Nos 6 and 7 with sashes and glazing bars). Stucco front. Nos 4 to 8 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1489502430 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Bedford Row | BEDFORD HALL | BEDFORD ROW 1. 5406 (West Side) Bedford Hall TQ 1402 NE 3/16 TQ 1502 NW 5/16 II GV 2. Now bank premises, originally the Wesleyan Chapel. 1839. Architect Charles Bide. Stuccoed. Cornice and pediment with circular opening in tympanum. Windows in frames with architraves over and in the case of the central one a pediment also. The 3 large windows are wider at the bottom than at the top. The door is placed beneath the central window in the same surround and the latter slopes outwards the whole way down as the door also is wider at the bottom than at the top. Bedford Hall forms a group with Nos 10 and 12 Warwick Street (including Thieves Kitchen premises at rear). Listing NGR: TQ1471202632 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Bedford Row (3 to 6 consec.) | - | BEDFORD ROW 1. 5406 (West Side) Nos 3 to 6 (consec.) TQ 1502 5W 6/14 II GV 2. 1803-1805. 4 storeys and semi-basement. 2 windows. White brick, No 4 stuccoed. Curved bay with window of 3 lights on all floors. Cornice with modillions. Glazing bars intact. Round-headed doorways in moulded frames up 6 steps with keystones over and semi-circular fanlights. 6 panel moulded doors. Gospel Hall, Nos 3 to 6 (consec.) and Nos 8 to 14 (consec.) form a group which Gospel Hall is of local interest only. Listing NGR: TQ1502202481 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Bedford Row (8 to 14 consec) | - | BEDFORD ROW 1. 5406 (West Side) Nos 8 to 14 (consec.) TQ 1502 NW 5/15 11.10.49. II GV 2. Ditto, the bow fronts mostly stuccoed. Nos 13 and 14 have an attic storey with 1 dormer. Similar doorways. But Nos 8 to 11 have Doric columns and pediment over, (this being a curved pediment at Nos 8 and 10). Similar fanlights and doors. No 12 has no basement. Gospel Hall, Nos 3 to 6 (consec.) and Nos 8 to 14 (consec.) form a group which Gospel Hall is of local interest only. Listing NGR: TQ1501902529 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Bridge Road (1) | ACE HOUSE | BRIDGE ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) TQ 1403 17/47 Bridge House In the above entry: Bridge House shall be amended to read Ace House ------------------------------------ BRIDGE ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) Bridge House TQ 1403 17/47 II 2. Circa 1840. 2 storeys. 2 windows. Ionic pilasters at the sides. Windows in frames, those on the ground floor having entablatures over supported by consoles. Slate roof with lead ridges. Porch with fluted Doric columns. Rectangular fanlight. Stuccoed. Listing NGR: TQ1468003446 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Brighton Road | BEACH HOUSE | BRIGHTON ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) Beach House TQ 1502 NW 5/19 3.8.48. II* 2. 1820 by J B Rebecca. Originally called Marino Mansion. 2 storeys, attic and basement. 3 windows. Stuccoed. Cornice and parapet. The central portion projects slightly with a pediment over. Windows in frames, the central one with entablature over. Porch in 3 sections with Doric pilasters. The south front has a curved bay of 3 windows with parapet over and Venetian shutters on the 1st floor. The east front of 1 window is also curved and has a projection on the ground floor. There is a later addition of 2 windows to the west. Edward Knoblock, Dramatist, lived here for some years and added the "Regency" internal decoration. Listing NGR: TQ1544902653 | II* | 03-AUG-1948 |
| Brighton Road (205 to 211 odd) | - | BRIGHTON ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Nos 205 to 211 (odd) TQ 1602 20/46 11.10.49. II GV 2. A small terrace in the style of the early C19 by S Adshead, 1904. 3 storeys. 3 windows. Stuccoed. Balconies of iron and wood on 1st floor with canopies and 4 slender columns supporting them from ground floor. Round-headed doorways in fluted frames. Nos 205 and 207 have mansarded roofs. Nos 209 and 211 have a cornice and pediment with moulded panel and swag below between the inner windows, also Venetian shutters to 2nd floor windows. This terrace is not complete and should have had 2 more houses to the east of Nos 209 and 211 to balance Nos 205 and 207. Nos 205 to 211 (odd) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1616802807 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Brighton Road (22 and 24) | - | BRIGHTON ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) Nos 22 and 24 TQ 1502 NW 5/136 II GV 2. Probably 1830s. A symmetrical 2-storey, stucco-fronted pair of houses, now unevenly divided on the ground floor between 2 shops, the left-hand one occupying about two-thirds of the space, the right-hand one-third. 3 sash windows with glazing bars (the middle one blind). Pilasters at either end, cut short by the modern shopfronts (and the right-hand one a little narrower). Cornice and parapet. Nos 22 to 26 (even) form a group of which No 26 is local interest only. Listing NGR: TQ1526202645 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Broadwater Road | ST MARYS CHURCH | BROADWATER ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) Broadwater St Mary's Church Broadwater, (formerly listed as Broadwater Church, (St Mary's)) TQ 1404 16/50 11.10.49. B 2. Cruciform. Mainly Transitional-Norman, with particularly fine arches to Choir and Nave. Brasses in chancel (to John Mapilton, Rector 1424-32) and nave (to John Corby, d 1415). Canopied tomb in chancel to Thomas, Lord de la Warr (d 1524) and altar-tomb in transept to 6th Lord de la Warr (d 1554). Wall monument to John Wenham (d 1768) and neo-classic one to John Daubuz (d 1831). 6 late Gothic misericords. Jacobean communion rail. Listing NGR: TQ1466104399 | II* | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Broadwater Road | SECTION OF WALL ON NORTH SIDE OF BROADWATER CHURCHYARD, RUNNING ALONG REAR OF NUMBER 2 BROADWATER STREET EAST AND EXTENDING TO THE NORTH WEST CORNER OF THE CHURCHYARD | BROADWATER ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) Broadwater Section of wall on north side of Broadwater Churchyard, running along rear of No 2 Broadwater Street East and extending to the north-west corner of the churchyard TQ 1404 16/50B II 2. Probably C18 or earlier. Flint and brick. Listing NGR: TQ1461404425 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Broadwater Road | BROADWATER MANOR HOUSE | BROADWATER ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) Broadwater Broadwater Manor House TQ 1404 16/48 11.10.49. II 2. Early C19. 2 storeys. 5 windows. White brick. Stringcourse above ground floor. The ground floor windows have semi-circular panels over them with keystones. Slate roof. Stuccoed porch probably later but containing original 8 panel moulded door. Late C19 addition to the east, addition and conservatory to the west. Listing NGR: TQ1467204308 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Broadwater Road | WALL TO SOUTH,EAST AND NORTH OF ST MARY'S CHURCHYARD | BROADWATER ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) Broadwater Wall to south, east and north of St Mary's Churchyard, Broadwater TQ 1404 16/50A II 2. High flint wall along south and east sides of churchyard; low flint wall with stone coping along north side. Probably C18 and earlier. Listing NGR: TQ1475504362 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Broadwater Street East (10) | - | BROADWATER STREET EAST 1. 5406 (South Side) Broadwater No 10 TQ 1404 16/236 II GV 2. Probably end of C18. Tiled mansard roof. Flint with brick dressings. 2 storeys, basement and attic. One sash window of Victorian type above (together with miniature window to the right). Shop-front below (with fascia board matching those of Nos 4, 6 and 8), enclosing left-hand door. Modillion eaves cornice. Attic window in west gable. Rear shares ancient walling with blocked openings of Nos 4, 6 and 8. Nos 4 to 10 (even) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1463804428 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Broadwater Street East (19) | - | BROADWATER STREET EAST 1. 5406 (North Side) Broadwater No 19 TQ 1404 16/205 II GV 2. Probably C18. 2 storeys. Front rendered and painted. East side painted flint; West side abuts No 21. 1 sash window with glazing bars. C19 shopfront, modernised. Nos 19 to 27 (odd), and the wall and gatepiers to No 27 form a group with No 2 Forest Road. Listing NGR: TQ1466104439 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Broadwater Street East (21) | - | BROADWATER STREET EAST 1. 5406 (North Side) Broadwater No 21 TQ 1404 16/51 II GV 2. C18. 2 storeys. 3 windows. Whitewashed flints. Red tiled roof. Casement windows, except the lower left one, which has been converted to a show window. Nos 19 to 27 (odd), and the wall and gatepiers to No 27 form a group with No 2 Forest Road. Listing NGR: TQ1466804444 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Broadwater Street East (23 and 25) | IVY COTTAGE AND ST MARYS COTTAGE | BROADWATER STREET EAST 1. 5406 (North Side) Broadwater No 23 (Ivy Cottage) and No 25 (St Mary's Cottage) TQ 1404 16/52 11.10.49. II GV 2. C18. One roof span, in red tiles. 2 storeys. Red brick and grey headers alternately. One window and 4 windows respectively, in frames, with glazing bars; all sashes except the upper one to No 23 and left-hand lower one to No 25, which are fixed. Slate-covered hood over the westernmost window and door of No 25. Nos 19 to 27 (odd), and the wall and gatepiers to No 27 form a group with No 2 Forest Road. Listing NGR: TQ1468604436 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Broadwater Street East (27 and 27A) | - | BROADWATER STREET EAST 1. 5406 (North Side) Broadwater Nos 27 and 27A TQ 1404 16/206 II GV 2. Probably mid C18, but with later modifications. On the corner of Forest Road and abutting No 25 on the west. 2 storeys. South front: Symmetrical. Painted brick. 3 sash windows, the middle one narrower. The upper ones have gauged heads and glazing bars. The lower side ones are set in wide projections under flat lead roofs and have glazing bars in upper sashes only. Central door with 6 moulded, fielded panels, enclosed by 3/4 Tuscan columns supporting entablature and parapet. Steep-pitched roof, tiled on north side, slated on south with decorative tile cresting. Gable chimneys. 2-span, lower wing at west end of rear, with steep, tiled roofs and tall gable chimneys. Rendered and painted. Irregularly-placed sash windows with glazing bars. Single-storey lean-to extension at east end of rear (and small 2-storeyed, flat-roofed section between this and rear wing). Nos 19 to 27 (odd), and the wall and gatepiers to No 27 form a group with No 2 Forest Road. Listing NGR: TQ1469604439 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Broadwater Street East (27) | GARDEN WALL AND GATEPIERS OF NUMBER 27 FROM CORNER OF NUMBER 25 TQ OUTBUILDING IN FOREST ROAD | BROADWATER STREET EAST 1. 5406 (North Side) Broadwater Garden wall and gatepiers of No 27 from corner of No 25 to outbuilding in Forest Road TQ 1404 16/207 II GV 2. Probably C18. Flint. Brick gatepiers to front entrance. Nos 19 to 27 (odd), and the wall and gatepiers to No 27 form a group with No 2 Forest Road. Listing NGR: TQ1471304439 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Broadwater Street East (4 to 8 even) | - | BROADWATER STREET EAST 1. 5406 (South Side) Broadwater Nos 4 to 8 (even) TQ 1404 16/208 II GV 2. Probably early C19. 2 storeys. Painted render. Slate roofs. In 2 ranges, the left-hand lower and set back, with one sash window with glazing bars (together with miniature window to left), the right-hand range with 2 sash windows of Victorian type. Bracketed fascia boards of Victorian or later date to each house, but show windows and door to No 6 only. A single shop occupied the ground storey of all 3 houses in 1974. The rear wall, overlooking the churchyard, evidently antedates the present houses. Flint with some brick, including blocked openings. Nos 4 to 10 (even) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1463004429 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Broadwater Street East (7 to 13 odd) | - | BROADWATER STREET EAST 1. 5406 (North Side) Broadwater Nos 7 to 13 (odd) TQ 1404 16/204 20.6.75. II GV 2. Probably circa 1800. A range of cottages, occupying a prominent slanting position at the mouth of the street and forming part of the view of Broadwater Church. 2 storeys. Moulded wooden eaves and moulded string course between storeys. 5 not quite evenly spaced sash windows with slender glazing bars. No 7 has a modern shopfront, No 9 a probably Victorian shopfront. Nos 11 and 13 have altered modern windows to the ground floor and left-hand doors with overlights. No 11 has a door of 5 moulded panels, No 13 one of 6 moulded panels (the top 2 glazed). The roofs are of even, low pitch, but No 7 is slated, the rest tiled. Nos 11 and 13 are tile-hung to the upper storey; elsewhere there is stucco. The return front of No 7, to the west, projects at the right end and is tile-hung to the upper storey, the rest being rendered. The rear of the cottages has sash windows with slender glazing bars. Nos 7 to 13 (odd) form a prominent group. Listing NGR: TQ1464504445 | II | 20-JUN-1975 |
| Broadwater Street West (26 and 28 including 28A) | - | BROADWATER STREET WEST 1. 5406 (North-East Side) Broadwater Nos 26 and 28 (including No 28A) TQ 1404 16/203 II 2. C18 or earlier. Irregular pair of cottages, evidently timber-framed. Each has a 2-storey gabled front, that of No 26 angled back, on the curve of the street. Painted render. One sash of Victorian type to each above and Victorian or later shopfront below. Re-tiled roofs. External chimney at north end with upper part removed, single offset below. No 26 extends less far to the rear than No 28 but has a smaller gable extension. Exposed timbers of ground floor interior show much renewal. Listing NGR: TQ1454804519 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Chapel Road | ST PAULS CHURCH | TQ 1402 SE WORTHING CHAPEL ROAD (West side) 753/3/22 St Paul's Church 11.10.1949 II* Chapel of ease, now church. 1812, exterior by john Rebecca of Worthing, interior by Charles Hide; extended and altered 1893. Yellow stock brick in Flemish bond with ashlar dressings, east end stuccoed and scored as ashlar; concealed roof 2 storeys, 3 x 6 bays. East end: 3-bay pedimented Tuscan portico on 3-step podium with attached pilasters at gable wall. Blocked central entry, now window, and side-doors, all in moulded architraves, the side-doors having panelled double-doors and fanlights with decorative glazing bars. Plat band breaking forward over doors and with segmental pediment over central door; 3 recesses above. Behind portico, body of church has tall, flat-coped, parapet with dies and, at east end, central cupola, on stepped podium, with Greek-key fueze and ball-finial. Returns: east bay treated as front and having a curved-backed rectangular recess to ground floor and a 24-pane sash window in eared architrave above. T o rest, 2-1ight segmental-arched mullioned windows to ground floor and round-arched windows above, all having gauged brick arches and stone inner surrounds and cills; ashlar cill band to 1st floor. On south side at left end, steps up to door in projecting flat-roofed porch; further left, tall added l-storey block with 2 windows. North side marked by attached church hall of 1964. Interior: added chancel at west end in classical style with columns, attached pilasters, moulded cornice, keyed arch with panelled soffit, panelled vault, tessellated floor, and alabaster and marble facings of 1912. Body of church has coffered ceiling with panelled beams; columns support side galleries which have panelled and balustraded fronts and original pews; organ gallery at east end with royal coat of arms. Decorative rnid-C19 wooden pulpit and choir stalls. Font, brought from Chichester Cathedral, has C 15 octagonal polished stone bowl. The chapel of ease was built to serve Worthing when this was still part of the parish of Broadwater. H A L Jefferson, St Paul's Church Worthing: a short history (1969). Listing NGR: TQ1481802837 | II* | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Chapel Road | WORTHING TOWN HALL INCLUDING ASSEMBLY HALL AND WORTHING ROOM | 1. CHAPEL ROAD 5406 Worthing Town Hall including Assembly Hall and Worthing Room TQ 1402 NE 3/228 II 2. Erected in 1933-4, C Cowles Voysey Architect. Detailing by J Brandon-Jones. The front part, the Town Hall, is in Neo-Georgian style. Centre and 2 wings. The centre is of 3 storeys red brick. Hipped slate roof with stone eave cornice Band below 2nd floor and plinth, 9 sashes in moulded architraves. Central Ionic Portico with motto "EX TERRA COPIAM E MARI SALUTEM" 1st floor windows behind portico have cast iron balconettes. Doorcase with console brackets. Clock tower with cupola, surmounted by ball finial and 8 Tuscan columns with plumed capitals. Flankings wings of 2 storeys in matching style. Red brick. Slate roof. Stone cornice and plinth. 5 sashes. Similar doorcases with entablatures and console brackets. The Assembly Hall to the rear derives from the Scandinavian Modernist style with Art Deco overtones. 2 storeys red brick. Cornice of bricks set endwise. 5 bays, the 3 centre ones projecting with 3 Art Deco style stone tragic masks over waves above 1st floor windows. Pivoting casement windows. Triple bronze doors with 8 panels divided by panels of stone rustication and wave pattened cornice with the letter W (for Worthing). Canopy above. 6 steps to street flanked by enormous stone urns on square plinths. The Worthing Room is a 1 storey addition in matching style to the West. The interior of the Town Hall has an impressive marble entrance hall having staircase with elaborate cast iron balustrade. The Assembly Hall has a room with Art Deco style reliefs with a marine theme star-shaped light fittings. The pressenium arch to the hall is flanked by relief sea horses. Listing NGR: TQ1477402944 | II | 19-JAN-1982 |
| Chapel Road (64) | THE WORTHING TABERNACLE | The following building shall be added to the list: CHAPEL ROAD 1. 5406 TQ 1402 NE 3/272 No 64 The Worthing Tabernacle II Nonconformist church and church hall. Thought to have been built in 1897 by Lund but rain water heads are dated 1908. Front of snecked rubble with Bath stone dressings. Other elevations are of stock brick with red brick dressings. Slate roof. West front has central gable with cross-shaped saddlestone flanked by octagonal pinnacles dying into 1st floor square buttresses with inset columns and buttresses to ground floor. Central rose window with 6 trefoliated headed lancets and quatrefoil band below. Stone band between floors. Ground floor has central triple round-headed window flanked by single round-headed windows, all connected by hood moulding. Wings have double mullioned window to 1st floor and gabled entrances with round headed arches with engaged granite columns. 8 light fanlight with Art Nouveau glazing and double plank doors with large decorative hinges. Side elevations are of stock brick in Flemish bond with red brick dressings. 2 gables with 3 lancets each to 1st floor connected by hood moulding and casements to ground floor with dogtooth moulded stone voussoirs above. Church hall at rear is in similar materials with 2 gables. Interior has 2 bays supported on tall iron plumed capitals. Round-headed chancel arch with granite column, pendants. Large curved wooden pulpit supported on 2 twisted columns with 2 curved staircases with elaborate iron railings. East rose window with stained glass floral panes. Side walls have triple lancet windows interrupted by the balcony with kingfisher roundels at the top. West window has floral decoration. Curved wooden balcony with diagonally placed boarding quatrefoil carving and brattishing. Original iron lamp brackets attached. Vertical dado-panelling. Walls of gallery have original iron lamp brackets. Original curved wooden pews. Unusual roof structure boarded with modified curved braces held together with iron tie rods. Rear vestibule has fireplace with Art Nouveau pomegranite motif and staircase to Minister's office has elaborate cast iron balusters and scrolled tread ends. Front vestibule has elaborate cast iron balusters to staircase and double doors with elaborate brass handles and art nouveau tracery. Listing NGR: TQ1479402892 | II | 02-DEC-1988 |
| Church Road | CHURCHYARD WALL OF ST ANDREW'S CHURCH, AND TABLE TOMB TO JOHN PARSON AND C18 GRAVE STONES WITHIN IT | CHURCH ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) West Tarring Churchyard wall of St Andrew's Church, and table-tomb to John Parson and C18 grave stones within it TQ 1303 12/59A TQ 1304 SW 15/59A II 2. A low flint wall, perhaps C18. Table-tomb to John Parson, d 1633. A number of C18 grave stones. Listing NGR: TQ1306404000 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Church Road | ST ANDREWS CHURCH | TQ 1304 SW CHURCH ROAD 753/15/59 West Tarring 11-OCT-49 (South side) St Andrews Church (Formerly listed as: CHURCH ROAD West Tarring West Tarring Church (St Andrew's)) GV II* Church. Late C13, C15, and C16; mid-C19 restoration and alterations; 1885 scheme of mosaic decoration, designed by William Butterfield and installed by itinerant Italian mosaicists employed by Burke & Co. Knapped flint, re-set mid-C19, with stone dressings. Graduated Horsham slate to chancel and porch roofs; wood shingles to spire; 1950s plain-tile roofs to nave and aisles. Plan: C13 5-bay aisled nave with clerestorey and central north and south porches (mid-C19); lower C15 2-bay chancel; C15 west tower with C16 spire. In Early English, Decorated and Perpendicular styles, having: quoins to angles; buttresses with ashlar off-sets; quoined pointed-arched openings, principal ones with hoodmoulds; corbelled raised verges with ashlar copings and gable crosses; off-set stepped ashlar copings to embattled 4-stage tower. Nave: 4 small windows to clerestorey and aisles; taller aisle east- and west-end windows, the former of 2 cusped lights with quatrefoil over. Tower: west end: large angle butt resses; door in moulded surround with hoodmould; replacement panel tracery to window over door; narrow trefoil-headed light above, and 2-light window to upper stage with reticulated tracery. North side: windows to 3rd and 4th stages similar. South side: similar 3rd-stage light; 4th stage has window of paired cusped lights with wooden lattice. Similar window to east side, below clock face and with oculus on south side. Vice at south-east angle has small rectangular chamfered lights. Octagonal spire with weather-cock. Chancel: offset plinth. Central butress. 2-light windows with renewed tracery; restored 5-light east window with cusped tracery to head. Late-C20 semi-subterranean vestry attached to south side of nave. Interior: nave: pointed-arched arcades with simply-moulded bases and capitals to circular columns; continuous hoodmoulds with carved pendants. Double piscina in south-east corner has moulded, cusped, architrave and bowls in the form of a trefoil and a quatrefoil. Mid-C19 chancel arch, crown-post roof, pulpit, lectern and some surviving floor tiles. 1885 mosaics above aisle arcades and tower arch depicting the 12 apostles set above the apostles creed and portraits of the patriarchs. Tower: arch carried on attached semi-octagonal columns; pointed-arched vice door; early-C18 Stiles family wall monument comprising aedicule with coat-of-arms over; flanking oval memorial tablets; C19 font. Chancel: C15 screen with perpendicular-style tracery, metal spikes, 6 misericords on east side carved with heads and foliage and the decorative panelling returning along chancel north and south walls (part-restored) with contemporary choir-stall fronts and fleur-de-lis finials. Jacobean altar-rail with turned balusters, stylised floral motif to frieze, and acorn finials. Matching contemporary altar table. North porch: commemorative brasses record the installation of the mosaics and their cleaning (1913). Red and black floor tiles. Inner door has moulded pointed arch with leaf terminals on attached columns. Plainer south doorway opposite. Donkin, V, "Mosaics at St Andrew, West Tarring", Church Building, Issue 56, March/April 1999, pp. 62-3. Pevsner, N, The buildings of England, West Sussex, pp. 392-3. Listing NGR: TQ1309704017 | II* | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Church Road (54 to 58 even) | - | CHURCH ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) West Tarring Nos 54 to 58 (even) TQ 1304 SW 15/188 20.10.75. II GV 2. Probably circa 1800. Terrace of 3 cottages, closely adjoining buildings to the west. 2 storeys. Coursed cobbles with painted brick quoining to corners and openings, and modillion eaves cornice. Old tiled roof. Ridge chimneys between houses. One sash window to each cottage, the lower ones with glazing bars. Right-hand doors to Nos 54 and 56; left-hand door to No 58. All openings camber-headed. Nos 1, 2 and 3 Market House and Nos 54 to 58 (even) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1319104022 | II | 20-OCT-1975 |
| Crescent Road | OUR LADY OF SION CONVENT | CRESCENT ROAD 1. 5406 1/105 (East Side) In the entries for: TQ 1402 NW 1/l051 Oar Lady of Sion Convent TQ 1402 NW 1/1061 Wall of Our Lady of Sion Convent, extending from south-east corner of building, along Crescent Road CRESCENT ROAD (East Side) shall be amended to read: CRESCENT ROAD (West Side) ------------------------------------ CRESCENT ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) Our Lady of Sion Convent TQ 1402 NW 1/105 II GV 2. Built as one composition with the abutting church, which is attributed to H Clutton and dates from 1864. 2 storeys. Plum-red brick with 2 pairs of bands of dark brick. East range, extending south along street from ritual west end of church, has 5 sash windows, semi-circular staircase projection, and 2 further sash windows south of this. There is a cross-range at the south end, the east front of which projects towards the street and has a round-arch opening (of banded brick with faintly pointed drip-mould above), giving access to internal porch with geometric tile decoration. Left of the porch is a partly external chimney corbelled out over a narrow buttress. Red tile roofs, over brick eaves nogging, which is also applied to the gable end. Further ranges of the convent extend towards Our Lady of Sion School, which adjoins to the west. Our Lady of Sion Convent, and wall extending south form a group with St Mary's Roman Catholic Church, Richmond Road and No 39 Richmond Road. Listing NGR: TQ1443502760 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Crescent Road | WALL OF OUR LADY OF SION CONVENT, EXTENDING FROM SOUTH EAST CORNER OF BUILDING, ALONG CRESCENT ROAD | CRESCENT ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) Wall of Our Lady of Sion Convent, extending from south-east corner of building, along Crescent Road TQ 1402 NW 1/106 II GV 2. Probably earlier than the convent. Flint. Our Lady of Sion Convent, and wall extending south form a group with St Mary's Roman Catholic Church, Richmond Road and No 39 Richmond Road. Listing NGR: TQ1446202690 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Durrington Hill | THE MANOR HOUSE | DURRINGTON HILL 1. 5406 (East Side) Durrington TQ 10 NW 23/73 Durrington Manor In the above entry: Durrington Manor Wall be amended to read The Manor House ------------------------------------ DURRINGTON HILL 1. 5406 (East Side) Durrington Durrington Manor TQ 10 NW 23/73 II 2. The front facing the road is C18, originally red brick, but has been refaced with cement. Horsham stone slate roof. 2 storeys. 3 windows. Stuccoed porch up 3 steps, recently reroofed with red tiles. Glazing bars missing. The garden front is Victorian. Listing NGR: TQ1194205314 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Durrington Hill | GREENSTEDE HOUSE | DURRINGTON HILL 1. 5406 (West Side) Durrington Greenstede House TQ 10 NW 23/220 II 2. Probably early C18. 2 storeys. Very steep slated roof, taller than the house below, with upturn over plain wooden eaves. 5 evenly-spaced casement windows, the lower ones camber-headed. Both slightly left of centre are a ridge chimney and the porch, which is a later addition (with pointed opening and jutting shoulders). Listing NGR: TQ1186905261 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Durrington Hill | DOWER HOUSE | DURRINGTON HILL 1. 5406 (East Side) Durrington Dower House TQ 10 NW 23/73A II 2. Abutting Durrington Manor at south-west corner and extending towards road at right angles to it. Formerly outbuildings, now converted to a 2-storey house. The main east part is a former barn, of flint with brick dressings, probably contemporary with the Manor, or somewhat later. Tiled roof, half-hipped at east end. North side has vertical quoin-bands, one dormer towards the west end and one modern ground floor window at the east end. South front altered. At the west of the barn is a short cross-range now bearing the appearance of a cottage, originally probably older than the Manor, but largely reconstructed, including the west front (which has reset old timber over left ground-floor window). Flint with brick dressings. Tiled roof. Tablet on north side states: "S 1819". This item is included for its group value with the Manor. Listing NGR: TQ1192805307 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Durrington Hill | ST SYMPHORIAN'S | DURRINGTON HILL 1. 5406 (West Side) Durrington St Symphorian's (formerly listed as Durrington Church (St Symphorian's)) TQ 10 NW 23/72 11.10.49. B 2. Early English Chapel disused and in ruins from 1650-1914. Restored 1914-1919. Chancel added 1939-1940. Listing NGR: TQ1183405298 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Durrington Lane | WALL ENCLOSING FRONT GARDEN OF ST MARY'S FARM HOUSE ON SOUTH, EAST AND NORTH WITH RETURN STRETCH FROM NORTH WEST CORNER TO NORTH END OF HOUSE, AND FURTHER SECTION FROM REAR OF HOUSE TO SHEDS TO THE WEST | DURRINGTON LANE 1. 5406 Wall enclosing front garden of St Mary's Farm House on south, east and north with return stretch from north-west corner to north end of house, and further section from rear of house to sheds to the west TQ 1104 8/170 7.5.75. II GV 2. Low. Flint. Probably contemporary with house. St Mary's Farm House, its wall, the barn to the south west and the barn and outbuilding to the south form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1191504787 | II | 07-MAY-1975 |
| Durrington Lane | ST MARY'S FARMHOUSE | DURRINGTON LANE 1. 5406 St Mary's Farm House TQ 1104 8/169 7.5.75. II GV 2. Probably mid C18, but with an earlier core perhaps C14 or C15. 2 storeyed detached oblong. Brick with steep roof. Largely asymmetrical fenestration. 2 evenly arranged 3-light casement windows, but additional left-hand 3-light on ground floor and additional single-light between the 2 on the upper storey. Door somewhat right of centre. All openings camber-headed. Ridge chimney, perhaps inserted to original open hall. Elements of 3-bay timber frame visible in upper storey. Modern lean-to extension at right, old one along rear; both one storey. St Mary's Farm House, its wall, the barn to the south west and the barn and outbuilding to the south form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1190704770 | II | 07-MAY-1975 |
| Elizabeth Road | ELIZABETH ALMSHOUSES (1 to 4 CONSEC) | ELIZABETH ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Nos 1 to 4 (consec.) Elizabeth Almshouses TQ 1402 NW 1/102 II GV 2. Dated 1860. Red brick with 2 bands of grey headers and stone dressings. 2 storeys. Symmetrical design of some richness. South front divides into 2 parts, each with 3 windows (the middle narrower) and central porch of wood with criss-cross gable work and spiral corner balusters. Upper windows are 2-light and single-light, lower 3-light under shallow pointed arches. All are leaded casements. Inscribed panels between upper windows and Dutch gablet above centre of building with round-arch niche and statue below. Slate roof with decorated cresting (also applied to porches). 3 tall moulded ridge chimneys, the gable ones projecting on upper storey over corbelling. Nos 1 to 4 (consec.) Elizabeth Almshouses form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1441002895 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Farncombe Road | LAMP STANDARD | In the entry for; WORTHING FORDCOMBE ROAD TQ 1502 NE 7/10005 Lamp Standard II the entry shall be amended to read; TQ 1502 NE WORTHING FARNCOMBE ROAD 7/10005 Lamp Standard II ------------------------------------ The following building shall be added to the list; WORTHING FORDCOMBE ROAD TQ 1502 NE 7/10005 Lamp Standard II Lamp standard. c1900, manufactured by Mackenzie Bros of Edinburgh. Cast iron overhanging arm variety. About 20 feet high. Shaft is octagonal with floral and fleur de lys motifs half way down and deep plinth to base. Top has ornate tapering arm supporting hexagonal iron and frosted glass lantern. Supporting brackets have daffodil design. One side has connection box door with Worthing Coat of Arms (Shield with 3 fishes) and motto "EX TERRA COPIAM E MARI SALVYEM". The only surviving example of this type left in Worthing. Listing NGR: TQ1558302901 | II | 02-AUG-1993 |
| Field Row | WALL ALONG EAST SIDE OF FIELD ROW BETWEEN AMBROSE PLACE AND SHELLEY ROAD | FIELD ROW 1. 5406 Wall along east side of Field Row between Ambrose Place and Shelley Road TQ 1402 NE 3/124 II 2. Flint with some brick sections. Probably C18. Listing NGR: TQ1475802608 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Findon Road (311 and 313) | GOAR COTTAGES | FINDON ROAD 1. 5406 (West Side) Nos 311 and 313 (Goar Cottages) TQ 10 NW 23/269 II 2. Probably later C18. A symmetrical pair of cottages on the acute corner with Bost Hill. 2 storeys. Flint, with numerous single-course bands of brick and quoining to openings, corners and down centre. 2 widely-spaced window with glazing bars and cambered heads. Doors paired at centre (with cambered heads). Steep, tiled roof. Rear extension under slope of roof. Listing NGR: TQ1255207548 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Forest Road (2) | LOXWOOD | FOREST ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) Broadwater No 2 (Loxwood) TQ 1404 16/53 II GV 2. Early C19. 2 storeys. 3 windows. White brick. Slate roof. Trellised wooden porch with iron balcony over. Recessed door in round-headed frame with semi-circular fanlight. 4 Panels cut out of original door and glazed. No 2 forms a group with Nos 19 to 27 (odd) and the wall and gatepiers to No 27 Broadwater Street East. Listing NGR: TQ1472704422 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Furze Road | DURRINGTON OR SALVINGTON MILL | FURZE ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) High Salvington Durrington or Salvington Mill (Formerly listed as The Mill) TQ 10 SW 23/69 11.10.49. II 2. Originally Durrington Mill but now usually called Salvington Mill, as it is actually in High Salvington which did not exist when the Mill was built. Post type with round house and fantail, (the round house modernised and windows inserted). Date 1700 over door. Timbers tarred. 3 sweeps intact, one missing, Machinery of the mill in working order. Listing NGR: TQ1227006666 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Goring Road | ST MARY'S CHURCH,GORING | Church of Norman origins, demolished in 1836 and rebuilt to the designs of Decimus Burton, retaining the piers of the Norman arcade, the lower parts of the chancel arch and, according to the church guide, the N and S walls to window sill level. Gothick style. MATERIALS: The church is rendered and blocked out with slate roofs. PLAN: Nave with W end gallery; chancel with 3 bay aisles, NE vestry; SE doorway and W entrance through the W tower. 1966 vestry block added to N side of the chancel; small 1999 lavatory block added to the N face of the tower. EXTERIOR: The render gives a smooth exterior. Buttressed chancel and aisles, roofed seperately from the nave, with coped parapets. All windows with Decorated style tracery and hoodmoulds with carved label stops: 2- and 3- light to the aisles, the chancel window 5- light. Slender 3- stage W tower with large, gables, diagonal buttresses rising to belfry stage only, a plain parapet above a corbelled cornice and a tall shingled spire. 2-centered moulded W doorway with detached shafts and carved. The tower has octafoils in roundels and 2-light traceried belfry windows. A sculpted figure of Christ on the S wall is a World War 1 memorial. Clerestory windows visible only from the the interior. INTERIOR: The interior has plastered walls and 3- bay N & S arcades of round piers on moulded bases. The volute-carved capitals appear to have been re-cut if not wholly of 1838. Simple chamfered arches spring from the piers. Flat plastered ceilings to aisles. Plain chamfered chancel arch: unplastered masonary below the springing of the arch appears to be C12. Flat plastered nave roof in the Gothick tradition, divided into 6 large panels by moulded ribs with shallow Tudor arched braces, pierced trefoils in the spandrels and pretty coloured vine bosses. The chancel roof is similar in character but Tudor arched in profile. The E wall retains its original 1838 Gothick scheme with ogee-headed frames to the Commandments and Creed and blind Gothick arcading below. A deep moulded string on the chancel walls rises over the opposed N and S doorways. On the N side of the chancel there is a chamfered arch into a shallow organ chamber. Deep W end gallery (contaning organ pipes) carried on octagonal iron piers with capitals with boxed in SW staircase. The gallery has a blind arcaded front with a Gothick frame to a clock face in the middle. The porch (bottom stage of the tower) has a flat plastered ceiling with a pattern of moulded ribs. Unusual font with round bowl, the base carved, and deep vertical mouldings to the stern. The 1888 polygonal timber pulpit with traceried panels. 1888 nave benches with shaped ends. The nave paving contains many inscribed slabs. Monuments include a late C15 brass, many C18 and early C19 wall monuments. Early C18 monument to Susan Cook with a lively bust; large white marble momument by Chantry to Isabella Lyon, d 1836. E ends of aisles with stained glass windows by Powell. The chancel arch is covered with a 1954 mural by Hans Feibusch. SUMMARY OF IMPORTANCE: This church is of special interest as a handsome 1838 design by Decimus Bureton which retains the Norman piers, although re-tooled, and some walling of the original church. The 1888 reordering of the interior complements the pretty Gothick interior, and it has a number of interesting momuments. ListingTQ10SW24/82 11/10/1949 |
II* | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Goring Road | OLD COURT HOUSE | GORING ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Goring-by-Sea Old Court House TQ 10 SW 24/232 II 2. 2 storeys. Front range probably circa 1840, but incorporating earlier thick walling (probably stone) and remains of former external stair at east end. Symmetrical, rendered front, with 2-storeyed gabled projection in centre, forming porch below. 3 widely-spaced sash windows, with glazing bars in upper storey only. Double doors to porch of 3 panels (the top glazed). Slate roof. Partly external gable chimneys. Rear range probably C18 but formed out of earlier work. Brick. Somewhat shorter in length than the front range. Irregular fenestration; 5 windows above (one blind and the left-hand a horizontal sash); 3 windows and left-hand door below. All sashes and glazing bars absent only from upper right-hand one. Slate roof with off-centre ridge chimney. Trap-door in north-west of house said to lead to dungeon of former court. Listing NGR: TQ1112902620 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Goring Road (203) | THE THATCHED COTTAGE | GORING ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Goring-by-Sea TQ 10 SW 24/83 11.10.49 The Thatched Cottage In the above entry: GORING ROAD (North Side) Goring-by-Sea shall be amended to reads: GORING ROAD (South Side) ) Goring-by-Sea ------------------------------------ GORING ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Goring-by-Sea The Thatched Cottage TQ 10 SW 24/83 11.10.49. II 2. C16. 2 storeys. 2 windows. Timber framed, painted brick or plaster between. Thatched roof replaced by tiles since last survey. Listing NGR: TQ1146602601 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Goring Street | THE BULL INN | GORING STREET 1. 5406 (West Side) Goring-by-Sea The Bull Inn TQ 10 SW 24/231 II 2. Exterior C18, but interior in part earlier. 2 storeys and attic. Main block symmetrical. 3 sash windows (with keystones above), the middle one narrower and the upper ones with glazing bars. A probably modern doorway with flat hood on moulded brackets. Renewed tiled roof of slightly broken, steep pitch. Gable chimneys. Front painted, south end flint and brick. Lower 2-storey south extension of flint and brick, perhaps partly older. One sash window above, forward projection below (with flat top, forward tiled pitch and shallow bow window in flat opening). Gable chimney. Tiled roof with flat top and short tiled pitches. Interior has exposed timber-framing and floor below ground level. Listing NGR: TQ1053402690 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Goring Way | JUPPS BARN | The following building shall be added to the list. WORTHING GORING WAY TQ 10 SW (south side) 24/235 JUPPS BARN II Barn, now church hall, and attached farmbuilding, now outbuilding. Aisle post dated "MH 1771"; mid-late C20 attractions. Coursed flint-stone with red brick dressings; pantile roof. 5-bay barn with rear aisle; former farmbuilding attached to rear left. Brick quoins to angles, cart-entry and slit vents. Central cart-entry masked by C20 porch which has double board door with strap hinges; former cart entry has timber posts with iron hooks from former doors and C20 small-pane glazing at top. Flanking cart entry are 2 tiers of vents, 3 to each level. Hipped roof. Returns: 2 over 2 vents; right return partly masked by attached church (not included in listing). Rear: central gabled cart porch, entry now blocked in cobblestone and with added bell under canopy. To right an inserted doorway. Former farm building attached and projecting on right has board door on right and 2 C20 small-pane casements, the openings with C20 timber lintels but old brick jambs and sloping tile window sills; roof hipped on right. Interior barn; original timberwork complete, including aisle posts (one with date) on padstones; straight brace to arcade plate and tie beams; queen strut roof trusses; staggered butt purlins; old rafters. The barn is recorded as having been built in 1771 for George Jupp, farmer (The Story of Goring and Highdown, p31). Listing NGR: TQ1089102984 | II | 31-JAN-1989 |
| Goring Way (90) | THE COTTAGE | In the entry for GORING WAY (north side) 9/165 Goring-by-Sea NO 88 (The Cottage) the address shall be amended to read: GORING WAY (north side) GORING-BY-SEA NO 90 (The Cottage) ------------------------------------ GORING WAY 1. 5406 (North Side) Goring-by-Sea No 88 (The Cottage) TQ 1003 9/165 II 2. Probably early C19. A cottage orne or possibly a remodelling in this manner. Detached. 2 storeys. Hipped thatched roof of fairly low pitch. Rendered front, but west end shows flint and brick construction. 3 casement windows with metal diagonal lattice-work glazing bars, evidently original. 2 further similar windows in sides of central gabled tiled porch. Open hearth in main room. Listing NGR: TQ1080503048 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Grafton Road | CHRIST CHURCH | 753/3/24 GRAFTON ROAD 11-OCT-49 (East side) Christ Church II* Town church, built in the centre of a square. 1840-43 to the designs of John Elliott of Chichester in lancet style, cost about 4,500 pounds the original design amended following criticism from the Camden Society. Chancel remodelled and refurbished in 1894. Flint with densely-packed galetting of flint flakes; some of the dressings are Caen stone but Ellerary notes that the quoins are experimental artificial stone (24); brick dressings to the 1894 phase; slate roofs. Elleray notes that the inner tower walls are brick and the upper two stages braced with timber (29). West tower, clerestoried nave; lean-to N and S aisles, N and S transepts; chancel with N organ chamber and S vestries. 4-stage tower with a freestone parapet above a corbelled cornice and angle buttresses which become diagonal on the upper two stages. Lancet windows except for a Decorated style traceried W window. Steps up to the W doorway which has a double chamfered arch. The tower was underpinned in 1907-8 under the supervision of Mr R Singer Hyde. The lean-to aisles are tall and narrow with angle buttresses and double chamfered lancet windows with hoodmoulds. Small paired lancet clerestory windows in square-headed frames. The transepts have large lancets in their W walls and stepped triple lancets in the N and S walls above doorways. The chancel has a 3-light Decorated style traceried E window. The 1894 vestries and organ chamber are built in a style to match the original but have yellow brick dressings to the openings. On the S side there is a polygonal vestry porch with a steep pyramidal roof and the earlier C19 vestry exists behind later additions. INTERIOR. Unusually tall, slender, octagonal Caen stone arcade piers with vertical recessed roll mouldings at the corners of each octagon; moulded capitals and double chamfered arches. Pitch pine tie beam, king post and strut roof to the nave with arched braces carried on short posts on moulded corbels; cusped detail. The transept roofs are similar. The aisle roofs are essentially one half of the same design. Moulded 1894 chancel arch on short shafts with moulded capitals. The chancel roof has 3 hammerbeam trusses with cusped decoration. The transepts have 1865 galleries, the N gallery with raked seats, the S gallery used as the organ chamber since 1971. 3-light 1894 internal W window with reticulated style tracery, inserted when the W gallery was removed. Full set of nave benches with poppyhead finials, a rarity. The 1894 chancel has a mosaic reredos with a frieze of mosaic foliage and text. The mosaic extends across the whole of the E wall and returns to N and S as a dado; mosaic sanctuary floor. 1894 choir stalls with open traceried frontals; encaustic tiles to the chancel floor. 1894 polygonal stone pulpit by Jones and Willis of London. The pulpit is on a stone stem with carved stiff-leaf cornices, the sides decorated with blind tracery and marble shafts. Font with a small octagonal bowl decorated with blind quatrefoils on a thick stem with trefoil-headed panels. 1892 organ by J J Binns of Leeds introduced in 1970. Oak panelling in tower porch of 1929. W window by Bell of Bristol, 1850. 'Cathedral' glass of 1894 in internal W window and aisles. Several C19 and later wall tablets and brasses. Although it was sited in what was a fashionable part of Worthing, this finely detailed church was erected specifically for the accommodation of the poorer classes and within an evangelical tradition. It is the first Gothic Revival church built in the town. Christ Church is an exemplary ambitious pre-archaeological Gothic style C19 church, preserving its original slender roofs and arcades and a full set of benches with poppyhead finials in the nave. Sources Elleray, D Robert, Christ Church Worthing, 1978 Pevsner, Sussex, 1965, 387 Listing NGR: TQ1467402783 | II* | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Grafton Road (57) | BENTWORTH LODGE | GRAFTON ROAD 1. 5406 (West Side) No 57 (Bentworth Lodge) TQ 1402 SW 3/108 II 2. Circa 1840. Carefully composed villa. 2 storeys. Stuccoed. Strongly projecting eaves below hipped, slated roof. Centre portion: 2 sash windows with glazing bars and straight moulded hoods above the ground floor ones. The rear of the building is wider, the angles with the centre portion being filled on the ground storey by porches with moulded entablature and flat roofs. Glazed double doors in left porch; single but bipartite door with 4 vertical panels in right porch; both facing front. Narrow blind windows on front facing wall above. 2 sash windows with glazing bars on each side of building. Listing NGR: TQ1463102751 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Grand Avenue (18) | BLACK NEST HALL | TQ 1302 WORTHING GRAND AVENUE 753/14/10036 Number 18 Black Nest Hall II Includes: Black Nest Hall, BATH ROAD, WORTHING. Barn, then house. C18 (reportedly 1728), dismantled, re-erected and converted 1926-7 by C P Munn and A Beresford Pite; 1960s addition; restoration and alterations c. 1975. Timber framed with herring-bone brick nogging; gables tile-hung with bands of fishscale tiles; concrete tile roof; brick chimneys. 6-bay barn with rear lean-to and opposing cart-entries, that at rear in midstrey. Converted to house with central open hall spanned by balconies at two levels to provide communication between rooms at either end; rear lean-to and midstrey retained, the latter housing stair. Converted in Tudor style, having: narrow panels and curved braces to framing; chamfered plinth; mullioned windows with leaded lights and casements, windows at left ("solar") end having Tudor-arched lights; 2-storey canted glazed porch with mullions and transoms and Tudor-arched board door; large decorative chimneys. 2 storeys and attic; 6 framed bays. Mid-rail of timber frame concealed by decorative lead band with vine and grape motif. Entrance to bay 3. Windows of 3, 4 and 6 lights to ground floor; 4, 3 and 3 lights above, the framing and window to first -floor left bay replacing former glazed screen wall of internal balcony. Single, pedimented, 3-light attic dormer with console-bracketed eared architrave. Lead rainwater pipes. Roof has weather vane and large chimney on left with coupled diagonally-set stacks with moulded heads; another stack to rear of 5th bay. Addition on right has re-set 1920s window and rainwater pipe, and board door. Further mullioned windows to rear and returns. Interior: timber frame has large-scantling unjowelled wall-posts, large arched braces to tie-beams; rectangular panels; midrail; queen-post roof with principal and common rafters and staggered butt purlins. Exposed brick walls at either end of open hall with large Tudor-arched fireplaces and Tudor-arched openings. Wooden open-well stair. Wide floor-boards. Linenfold and board doors. Wooden balusters to balconies. Decoratively-painted wind dial in attic. Re-used C19 panelling to lower ceiling in hall and lower balcony. The original barn was located at Dunsfold, Surrey. A good-quality house of the 1920s exemplifying the Inter War vogue for embellishing genuine old buildings in a Tudor style. Listing NGR: TQ1340402178 | II | 15-JUL-1999 |
| Half Moon Lane (11) | HALF MOON HOUSE | HALF MOON LANE 1. 5406 (West Side) Durrington Half Moon House (formerly Cottage) TQ 1205 10/76 II 2. Circa 1840. 2 storeys. 3 windows. Stuccoed. Slate roof. Doorway with Doric pilasters and entablature. Later addition of 1 window with higher facade to the north. Listing NGR: TQ1283105311 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Half Moon Lane (43) | SALVINGTON NURSERIES | HALF MOON LANE 1. 5406 (West Side) Durrington Salvington Nurseries or Taylor's Nurseries TQ 1205 10/77 II 2. Late C18. 2 storeys. 3 windows. Grey headers with red brick dressings. Mansarded roof of red tiles. Small cornice with modillions below eaves. Victorian porch added. Glazing bars missing. Listing NGR: TQ1283605461 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Hall Avenue | OFFINGTON HALL RIDING SCHOOL | HALL AVENUE 1. 5406 (West Side) Offington Offington Hall Riding School TQ 1305 10/180 II 2. Probably C18. Former stables of Offington Hall. A symmetrical layout. Flint and brick dressings. The main range fronts the street. Full-height rectangular passage through centre, with round arch to front. Semi-circular window each side of this. Beyond these, north and south are blocked barn doors (the south one now with a casement window). Further windows to the south end of the range (which is used as a dwelling) but blank at the north end. Short wings extending from the back of the main range, form 3-sided courtyard, with hipped roofs, the south wing having a series of almost full-height doors. Tall clock turret over the centre of the barn, in 3 stages (square with pediments; tiled canted sides; open belfry), crowned by tall weather vane. Listing NGR: TQ1352205118 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Hall Close | OLD BREWHOUSE | HALL CLOSE 1. 5406 Offington Old Brewhouse TQ 1305 10/181 II 2. Outbuilding of former Offington Manor, said to date back to 1150. Present structure probably mainly Cl6-C17. Now stands isolated in modern development. An oblong 2-storey timber-frame building. Box-frame, with regular grid of vertical and horizontal timbers beneath steep roof. Irregular fenestration. Main front has 3 casement windows above and 3 below, together with 2 doors. Small chimney at left gable (with one-storey lean-to extension beyond). Large, very tall ridge chimney with offsets, at right end, with one-storey extension beyond, under roof with same ridge height but longer, steeper slopes, and having 2 casement windows. Listing NGR: TQ1344105179 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Ham Road (27) | OLD MILL COTTAGE | HAM ROAD 1. 5406 (West Side) Old Mill Cottage TQ 1602 20/214 1.9.75. II 2. Said to be 1720 and to have had connections with Navarino Mills. Evidently originally a pair of cottages. Painted cobbles largely rendered on sides. Slate roof with central ridge chimney. Quoining to corners and openings. 2 storeys. 1 widely-spaced sliding sash to each half, with glazing bars. The doorways, on the outer sides of these, now converted to matching windows. All openings camber-headed. One fixed window in front end of south side, upstairs. A quoined doorway in north side. Listing NGR: TQ1617202808 | II | 01-SEP-1975 |
| Ham Road (27) | SIDE WALLS TO REAR GARDEN OF OLD MILL COTTAGE | HAM ROAD 1. 5406 (West Side) Side walls to rear garden of Old Mill Cottage TQ 1602 20/214A II 2. Cobble walls, probably contemporary with house. Listing NGR: TQ1621002899 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Heene Terrace | - | HEENE TERRACE 1. 5406 East Mansions Heene Court Mansions Nos 6 to 10 (consec.) Nos 11 and 12 (Mayfair Hotel) Nos 13 to 17 (consec.) West Mansions TQ1402 SW 2/91 TQ 1302 14/91 12.9.75. II GV 2. 1865, possibly by G A Dean. A unified composition set back from the sea front behind a garden. 3 storeys, basement and attics. Fawn-coloured brick with stucco dressings, including bracketed cornice and drafting to basement and ground storey. Mansard slate roof. 3 windows to each home, mainly sashes but some altered. Tall dormers, across lst storey on large scroll brackets, with decorative iron railings from which rise spiral columns supporting cyma reversa canopy, which projects forward over the porches of composite columns and pilasters supporting an entablature, which are paired except for the 2 houses at either end, and the 3 centre houses, which project somewhat and have balconies continuous with the porches (3 bays to each house). The end houses also project somewhat, have 5 windows and a central porch. Both central and end houses have a full attic storey with its own cornice. Many sections of balcony and some porches are glazed in. West Mansions and the upper storeys of No 8 are stuccoed. The chimneys vary. Many are tall with bold bracketing, others have moulded cornice. The basement areas have railings with pike finials. The rear has half-landing extensions in abutting pairs. East Mansions, Heene Court Mansions, No 6 to 17 (consec.), and West Mansions, Heene Terrace and the Burlington Hotel, Wordsworth Road, form a group of which the Burlington Hotel is of local interest only. Listing NGR: TQ1390702197 | II | 12-SEP-1975 |
| High Street (40 including 40A) | - | 1. HIGH STREET 5406 (East Side) No 40 (including No 40A) TQ 1502 NW 5/43 II GV 2. Early C19. 3 storeys. 1 window. Curved front on 1st and 2nd floors with 3 light windows in it. Stuccoed. Long and short quoins. Cornice. 6 panel moulded door. Modern shop front. Nos 40 to 44 (even) including No 40A form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1508402816 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street (42) | - | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) No 42 TQ 1502 NW 5/131 II GV 2. Probably mid C19. 3 storeys. Stucco-fronted. Slate roof. One window (casements on 1st and 2nd floors, the former wider, and a sash bow window on the ground floor). Nos 40 to 44 (even) including No 40A form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1508202821 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street (44) | - | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) No 44 TQ 1502 SW 5/134 II GV 2. Probably circa 1800 or before. Painted cobbles. Tiled roof. 3 sash windows with glazing bars (but no top left one and the bottom right being modern). Set back somewhat from No 42. Nos 40 to 44 (even) including No 40A form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1508202828 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street (79) | THE SWAN INN | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (West Side) The Swan Inn TQ 1503 19/211 II 2. Probably mainly C18 but considerably modified. 3 storeys. Rendered (except rear north gable which is brick). Slate roof in 2 steep spans, the rear somewhat higher. East Street front: 3 sash windows with glazing bars (top middle one blind). Parapet with rudimentary pediment. Modern extension towards street on ground floor. West front: 4 irregularly-spaced sash windows with glazing bars. Listing NGR: TQ1500503034 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street Tarring (1) | THE GEORGE AND DRAGON PUBLIC HOUSE | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (West Side) West Tarring The George and Dragon Public House TQ 1304 SW 15/189 II GV 2. Probably mid C18. 2 storeys. Steep tiled roof (renewed). Gable chimney at north end. Moulded wooden eaves. Brick, painted on front, red with grey headers on north end, south end rendered. Unevenly-spaced windows. 3 widely-spaced sash windows with glazing bars (and one blocked) on upper storey. 3 modern 2-light sash windows, 1 probably C19 sash window and 2 doors on ground floor. The George and Dragon Public House and Nos 3 to 19 (odd), including No 13a (Chippers) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1322004054 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street Tarring (11 and 13) | - | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (West Side) West Tarring Nos 11 and 13 TQ 1304 SW 15/191 II GV 2. A pair, abutting No 15. Probably early C19. 2 storeys. Rendered. 3 unevenly-spaced sash windows above, with moulded architraves and glazing bars. Below: on the left a 4-panel door; across the rest of the front a moulded cornice, probably belonging to a shop of the original date, with 4 slender pilasters, the middle 2 framing the doorway (4-panel door, top 2 glazed) and the left-hand one having lost its lower portion. The left window under the cornice fixed, the right a sash with glazing bars. Slate roof with gable chimneys. Unmoulded eaves. The George and Dragon Public House and Nos 3 to 19 (odd), including No 13a (Chippers) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1324704095 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street Tarring (12 and 14) | INCLUDING GARDEN WALL TO SOUTH | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring Nos 12 and 14 including garden wall to south TQ 1304 SW 15/196 II GV 2. A pair, abutting No 16 on the north. Probably circa 1800. 2 storeys. Coursed cobbles. 2-span slate roof. 2 widely-spaced sash windows (with glazing bars) and left-hand 4-panel door. Garden wall to street extends from south end to Parsonage Row. Part flint, part brick. Nos 2 to 16 (even) and Nos 20 to 32 (even) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1325504080 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street Tarring (13A) | CHIPPERS | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (West Side) West Tarring No 13a (Chippers) TQ1504 SW 15/192 II GV 2. Abutting the rear of No 13, formerly probably united with it, at right angles and facing north. Probably C18. 2 storeys. Flint, with brick dressings. Slope of tiled roof extends only a very slight distance, being apparently modified to a flat roof. One sash window with glazing bars on upper storey, a door and 2 modern windows below. The George and Dragon Public House and Nos 3 to 19 (odd), including No 13a (Chippers) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1324604106 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street Tarring (15 and 17) | - | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (West Side) West Tarring Nos 15 and 17 TQ 1304 SW 15/193 II GV 2. Probably C18, but modified in early C19. A pair, detached at north end. Not symmetrical. Rendered, but rear of No 15 of flint and of No 17 brick; north end flint and render. Roof hipped at north end, slated on front and tiled on rear. No 15 has 2 windows (left-hand sash with glazing bars right-hand and lower modern). No 17 has 2 windows (sashes with glazing bars, but the lower left being a door). No 15 has a 6-fielded-panel central door (top 2 panels glazed). No 17 has rear extension of brick with mansard roof. The George and Dragon Public House and Nos 3 to 19 (odd), including No 13a (Chippers) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1325704111 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street Tarring (16) | PROVIDENCE COTTAGE | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring No 16 (Providence Cottage) TQ 1504 SW 15/63 II GV 2. C18. 2 storeys, 2 windows and 1 blocked. Red brick. Doorway in frame. 6 panelled moulded door, the top 2 panels cut away and glazed. Nos 2 to 16 (even) and Nos 20 to 32 (even) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1394703892 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street Tarring (19) | - | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (West Side) West Tarring No 19 TQ 1304 SW 15/61 20.10.75. II GV 2. Early C19. 2 storeys, 2 windows. Grey headers with red brick dressings. Hipped slate roof in 2 sections. Glazing bars missing. Doorway with pilasters and entablature. 6 panelled moulded door, the top 2 panels cut away and glazed. Shop window inserted in the left half of the ground floor. The George and Dragon Public House and Nos 3 to 19 (odd), including No 13a (Chippers) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1326204118 | II | 20-OCT-1975 |
| High Street Tarring (2 and 4) | - | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring Nos 2 and 4 TQ 1304 SW 15/195 II GV 2. At the mouth of High Street abutting Parsonage Row at the north end, and comprising 3 cottages, the right-hand one being a Post Office, the 2 others probably formerly shops. C17 or C18 timber frame, much modified. 2 storeys. Steepish tiled roof with small gable in centre and 2 tall chimneys at south end. 3 windows in all, the upper centre and right hand ones being sashes with glazing bars. The right-hand cottage is faced with brick (painted) and has projecting eaves. The other 2 have a coved jetty to the upper storey, which is tile-hung. The south is tile-hung to the gable, otherwise roughcast. It has 2 small casements above, one modern window at left side below. Nos 2 to 16 (even) and Nos 20 to 32 (even) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1323504048 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street Tarring (20, 22 and 24) | - | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring Nos 20 to 24 (even) TQ 1304 SW 15/64 II GV 2. 3 early C19 cottages. 2 storeys, 5 windows in all. Painted brick. Small cornice with modillions below eaves. Slate roof. No 20 has a doorway with pilasters and entablature and 6 panelled moulded door. No 22 has a small early C19 shop window with small square panes. Nos 2 to 16 (even) and Nos 20 to 32 (even) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1327604106 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street Tarring (26) | OLD CASTLE | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring No 26 (Old Castle) TQ 1304 SW 15/65 II GV 2 C18. 2 storeys, 3 windows. Stuccoed. Eaves cornice. Hipped slate roof, originally Horsham stone slates. Casement windows on 1st floor, sash windows below. Nos 2 to 16 (even) and Nos 20 to 32 (even) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1328404108 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street Tarring (28 and 30) | - | The entry for: HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring TQ 1304 SW 15/66 No 30 II G.V. 2. Pair of probably C17 cottages, now united. 2 storeys. Stuccoed. 3 windows, mixed casement and sash. Roof partly Horsham stone slated, mainly tiled. Tall brick stack and gable one. Possibly timber-framed within. Nos 2 to 16 (even), Nos 20 to 26 (even), and Nos 30 and 32 form a group Shall be amended to read: 1. 5406 HIGH STREET (East Side) West Tarring TQ 10 SW Nos 28 and 30 SP/457 II 2. House, now two cottages, C16, altered. Stucco over timber frame, some brick and cobble. Plain tile roofs. Two storeys. The doors flank the windows, with that of No 28 under the catslide roof which extends the hip at this end. Modern part-glazed doors. Each cottage has one window per floor, all recent. That to ground floor of No 30 is fixed with glazing bars, the remainder are casements, that to ground floor of No 30 in a segmental-arched surround. One gable chimney. At rear of No 30, a wall-plate is exposed above the first floor window. Inside No 28 are moulded beams to ground floor, a moulded Tudor-arched wooden doorway, and a large fireplace, from which the stack has been removed above roof level. Down braces in the party wall and simple crown post roof. Nos 2 to 16 (even), Nos 20 to 32 (even) form a group ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. 5406 HIGH STREET (East Side) West Tarring TQ 1304 SW 15/197 No 30 II GV 2. Probably C17 cottage, with stuccoed front. 2 storeys. One window, casement above, sash below. Left-hand door. Hipped tiled roof. Gable chimney. Possibly timber-framed within. Nos 2 to 16 (even) and Nos 20 to 32 (even) form a group. In the above entries, Nos 28 and 30 High Street, West Tarring shall be amended to read No 30 and the entry shall now read: ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. 5406 HIGH STREET (east side) Side) West Tarring No 28 TQ 1304 SV 15/66 II GV 2. C17 cottage with stuccoed front. 2 storeys. 2 windows. Horsham stone slate roof on south side, the remainder red tiled, Tall brick chimney. Nos 2 to 16 (even) and Nos 20 to 32 (even) form a group. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring No 30 TQ 1504 SV 15/197 II GV 2. Probably C17 cottage, with stuccoed front. 2 storeys. One window, casement above, sash below. Left-hand door. Hipped tiled roof. Gable chimney. Possibly timber-framed within. Nos 2 to 16 (even) and Nos 20 to 32 (even) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1329404120 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street Tarring (3 and 5) | MALTHOUSE COTTAGE AND No.5 | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (West Side) West Tarring No 3 (Malthouse Cottage) and No 5 TQ 1304 SW 15/60 30.7.75. II GV 2. One roof span. C17. 2 storeys, 3 windows each. No 3, cobbles, ground floor cemented and cement surrounds to 1st floor windows; the ground floor windows enlarged. No 5, flints with red brick dressings. Ground floor of No 5 made into a shed or garage. Lower portion of roof Horsham stone slates, the upper portion replaced with red tiles. The George and Dragon Public House and Nos 3 to 19 (odd), including No 13a (Chippers) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1322504077 | II | 30-JUL-1975 |
| High Street Tarring (32) | - | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring No 32 TQ 1304 SW 15/198 II GV 2. Probably C18. 2 storeys. Rendered. 2 sash windows (and a further one between, on ground floor). Right-hand door of stable type, with 2 fielded panels below and 4 above (the top 2 glazed). Left-hand gable chimney and central ridge chimney. Steep-pitched tile roof. 2 unequal wings at rear with similar roofs. Nos 2 to 16 (even) and Nos 20 to 32 (even) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1329704132 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street Tarring (38 and 40) | - | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring Nos 38 and 40 TQ 1304 SW 15/199 II 2. An L-shaped building, now 2 houses; perhaps of the C16 but considerably altered. 2 storeys with long, steep, uneven tile roof hipped to south. No 38 is the longer range, parallel to the road but set back from it. Upper front and left half of south end tile-hung; the lower part rendered on front and right-hand part of south end; the rear and lower right-hand part of the south end being flint with brick dressings. Irregular fenestration. 3 windows above, the left-hand one a dormer; and 2 windows below, together with 2 doors. Large mid-ridge chimney, above open hearth. Timber frame exposed inside: braced kingpost type of roof. No 40 occupies most of the short range, which extends forward at the left end of the longer range. Faced with flints except gable front and lower part of inner return side, which are rendered and painted. External chimney with offset to north. One window on gable front and right-hand doorway. All windows of both houses are modern casements. Listing NGR: TQ1332004154 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| High Street Tarring (42) | THE HOLLIES | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring No 42 (The Hollies) TQ 1304 SW 15/67 11.10.49. II 2. C18. 2 storeys, 3 windows. Cobbles with red brick dressings. Eaves cornice. Round-headed doorway in frame. L shaped building behind. Listing NGR: TQ1332304172 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| High Street Tarring (6 to 10 even) | INCLUDING BECKETS COTTAGE | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring Nos 6 to 10 (even) (Parsonage Row, including Beckets Cottage) TQ 1304 SW 15/62 11.10.49. II* GV 2. C15. Originally one house, now 3 cottages belonging to the Sussex Archaeological Trust, of which the centre one is a museum. 2 storeys, 1 window each. Timber framed and plaster. Casement windows. Horsham stone slate roof. Gable to No 8 with scalloped bargeboard. 1st floor of Nos 8 and 10 overhangs on brackets. No 6 has a tie beam under eaves with a curved beam supporting it, and slightly projecting windows on both floors. Nos 2 to 16 (even) and Nos 20 to 32 (even) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1324204061 | II* | 11-OCT-1949 |
| High Street Tarring (7 and 9) | BANNER HOUSE AND BANNER COTTGE | HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (West Side) West Tarring Nos 7 (Banner House) and 9 (Banner Cottage) TQ 1504 SW 15/190 II GV 2. A pair of cottages. Timber-framed, of C17 or earlier, with probably C18 rendered facing of considerable thickness. 2 storeys. Steep slated roof with very small goblets at each hip. Timbers exposed on upper part of north end. 4 modern casement windows and neo-Georgian (or renewed) doorcase to No 7. A parallel range to the rear: probably C18 and slightly taller. Hipped tiled roof. Cobble and brick. The George and Dragon Public House and Nos 3 to 19 (odd), including No 13a (Chippers) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1324104088 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Humphrys Road | HUMPHRYS ALMSHOUSES (7 and 8) | HUMPHRYS ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) Nos 7 and 8 Humphrys Almshouses TQ 1402 NE 3/109 II 2. The only remaining portion of Humphrys Almshouses. A detached pair on the corner with Portland Road. Mid C19. 2 storeys. Knapped flint with stone dressings. 2 string courses between storeys. Steep tiled roof with cresting. Gable chimneys. 3 windows. Upper side ones: 3-light with mullions. Upper centre one: single-light. Lower ones: 3-light with mullions and ousped heads above tops of lights. Large gabled porch of open timberwork above flint walls. Lean-to extension at rear. Low flint boundary wall. Listing NGR: TQ1469802743 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Ilex Way | GORING HALL | WORTHING ILEX WAY TQ 10 SW 24/228 Goring Hall II School, formerly house, c1889 in Queen Anne style, a replica of the earlier house on the site by Charles Barry which was burnt down and identical except that the earlier house was rendered. Built in red brick in Flemish bond. Entrance front of 2 storeys 7 windows. Panelled parapet and cement band. 12 pane sashes with rubbed brick voussoirs and cornices above and wooden jalousies. Closed in porch with round-headed arch with 8 double panelled door with iron fanlight. Garden front has 7 windows, including 3 in central curved bow through both storeys. 2 modern attic windows inserted on left hand side. C20 1 storey brick and cement classroom to left hand side replacing greenhouse. Entrance hall has an elaborate wooden fireplace dated 1889 with the initial L and a tiled surround. 6 panelled doors. Dado panelling with Gothic designs and Jacobean style well staircase. Round-headed staircase window with shield of Bowes-Lyon family and motto "IN TE DOMINE SPERAVI". Lounge has wooden fireplace of early C18 design with the inscription: "HAE AEDES AEDIFICATAE AD 1840 INCENDIO DIRUTAE MON AUG 1888. RESTITUTAE ET EMENDATAE AD 1888-89. Iron fireback with gladiator designs. Dining Room has Jacobean type ceiling with central plasterwork design and wooden Jacobean- style fireplace with tiled surround and iron fireback. The house was built for the Lyon family. Originally it had a tower which has since been demolished. Listing NGR: TQ1059902462 | II | 17-FEB-1988 |
| Ilex Way | WALL TO FORMER ORCHARD NORTH OF GORING HALL | ILEX WAY 1. 5406 (South Side) Goring-by-Sea Wall to former orchard north of Goring Hall TQ 10 SW 24/230 II 2. Probably C18. Forming a rectangle. Brick to north and south, flint and brick to east and west. Listing NGR: TQ1060402543 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Ilex Way | FORMER STABLES OF GORING HALL | ILEX WAY 1. 5406 (South Side) Goring-by-Sea Former Stables of Goring Hall TQ 10 SW 24/229 II 2. Probably circa 1830. 3-sided courtyard, with one-storey coach-house wings either side and 2-storey range at rear with plain arch through centre. Cobbles with brick dressings. Slate roofs over brick modillion cornice, formed into pediments on gables of coach-house wings (with roundels enclosed) and over arch of main block, which also has semi-circular windows on the ground floor each side and extensions beyond coach-house wings. Listing NGR: TQ1059402519 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Jefferies Lane | SEA COURT | JEFFERIES LANE 1. 5406 (South Side) Goring-by-Sea Sea Court TQ 10 SW 24/234 II 2. C18 and earlier, but much modified. A detached house, formerly the Vicarage of Goring Church. 2 storeys. North fronts 2 gables. 3 irregular sash windows. Left-hand door. Single-storey wing runs forward at right end, probably incorporating pre-C18 work. Flint and brick, with slate roof. South front: a range of regular design, probably early to mid C19, perhaps replacing a previous main block. Painted cobbles. Slate roof. Gable chimneys. A plain balcony on iron posts across upper storey. 3 french windows, each flanked by pairs of smaller casement windows, 11 in all. Parts of ground floor interior of house are at lower level and probably pre-C18. Listing NGR: TQ1118602450 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Jefferies Lane | JEFFERIES HOUSE | JEFFERIES LANE 1. 5406 (South Side) Goring-by-Sea Jefferies House TQ 10 SW 24/233 II 2. Richard Jefferies, naturalist and writer, lived here from 1886 and died here the following year. The house is circa 1880. A detached, 2-storey building without architectural pretention, but with character. Main front faces south, onto garden; large flints and brick dressings. 3 windows, the central one a camber-headed casement, the side ones 5-light bay windows with sashes, having decorated tiles between storeys and in gables above. Central door of 5 moulded, fielded panels. North street front: under lean-to pitch of main span (all slated, with wooden finials); 3 casement windows; central door. North front and sides are of deep-set flints. Listing NGR: TQ1123602466 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Lansdowne Road | ST BOTOLPH'S CHURCH | LANSDOWNE ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) St Botolph's Church TQ 1302 14/186 C 2. 1873. Early English in style. Flint with stone dressings. Steep slate roofs with tile cresting. Chancel, nave, lean-to north aisle, wider south aisle under its own roof-ridge, with wide transept-chapel at one end and tower with short shingled spire over porch at the other end. Interior of red and fawn brick and stone dressings. Listing NGR: TQ1375502811 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Lansdowne Road | RUINED PORTION OF FORMER ST BOTOLPH'S CHURCH, EAST OF PRESENT CHURCH | LANSDOWNE ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Ruined portion of former St Botolph's Church, east of present Church TQ 1302 14/187 II 2. Said to be C13 and earlier. Somewhat scanty and much weathered remains of the east end of the former church. Listing NGR: TQ1377702820 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Little High Street (83) | THE HOLLIES | LITTLE HIGH STREET 1. 5406 (North Side) No 83 (The Hollies) TQ 1503 19/212 II 2. A detached house of before 1815, standing prominently at the east end of the street, at the head of High Street. Pale fawn-coloured brick. Hipped slate roof. 2 storeys. 3 arches incised in facade, enclosing 3 sash windows with glazing bars. 6-panel door within probably Victorian wooden porch, with carved openwork gable projecting on brackets. Listing NGR: TQ1502403068 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Littlehampton Road | NORTH BARN (RANGE OF OUTBUILDINGS ON EAST SIDE OF YARD) | LITTLEHAMPTON ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) North Barn (range of outbuildings on east side of yard) TQ 1003 9/164 7.5.75. II 2. Slightly detached and considerably lower shed making up the group round the yard; of the same build and evidently the same date, being open on the west side, towards the yard, supported by a row of posts. Listing NGR: TQ1027603723 | II | 07-MAY-1975 |
| Littlehampton Road | NORTH BARN (MAIN BLOCK) INCLUDING WALL ACROSS THE SOUTH, BOUNDING THE ROAD | LITTLEHAMPTON ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) North Barn (Main block) including wall across the south, bounding the road TQ 1003 9/163 7.5.75. II 2. Probably early C19. Forming a yard (with the separate shed on the east side), the main block is L-shaped, with a very large barn forming the rear, north side of the yard, a long shed extending from it along the west side, the south side being closed by a flint wall with stone coping. Well-built in cobbles, with brick dressings. Slate roof of even height over both wings. Double full-height doors to centre of barn, which has queen-post type of roof. The shed is open below, on the yard side, weather-boarded above with casement windows. Listing NGR: TQ1024803712 | II | 07-MAY-1975 |
| Liverpool Terrace (1 to 12 consec.) | - | LIVERPOOL TERRACE 1. 5406 Nos 1 to 12 (consec.) TQ 1402 NE 3/20 TQ 1402 SE 4/20 11.10.49. II GV 2. 1830-1835. Possibly designed by Amon Henry Wilds of Brighton, but Edward Snewin's "Glimpses of Old Worthing" gives the Architect as Henry Cotton. 4 storeys and basement with area (an extra storey added to Nos 8 and 10), 4 windows each. Stuccoed, the ground floor rusticated. Curved bay of 3 windows each on all floors including the basement. Cornice and parapet. Stringcourse above 1st floor. Iron balconies on 1st floor (replaced at Nos 8, 11 and 12). Instead of an iron balcony No 10 has a narthex or colonnade of 5 large Doric columns over the pavement with a wide stuccoed balcony above having a balustrade supporting urns. Nearly all glazing bars intact. Rectangular fanlights to doorways and 8 panelled moulded doors. Railings to basement areas and front steps, with finials in form of spears impaling crescents. Nos 1 to 12 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1477102551 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Marine Parade | BURLINGTON HOTEL | MARINE PARADE l. 5406 Burlington Hotel TQ 1402 SW 2/92 II 2. 1865. Prominent corner building in Italianate style 3 storeys and attics stuccoed. Slate mansard roof with 2 tiers of dormers. Marine Parade elevation has 3 bays. Bracket eaves cornice and bands between floors. 2nd floor windows are sashes with verticals only and cornices above. 1st floor has 3 round headed windows and tented canopy. Burnt out glazed extension to ground floor. Elevation to Road has similar windows but 3 elevation cast iron balconies at 1st floor level and central round-headed entrance with half columns with caryatids supporting the central balcony. Ground floor rusticated. Further 2 bay extension to left in matching style with double round headed windows with hood mouldings. Listing NGR: TQ1408902202 | II | 19-AUG-1982 |
| Marine Parade | THE LIDO | MARINE PARADE 1. 5406 The Lido TQ 1402 SE 4/271 II 2. G.V. Band enclosure, now bathing pools 1925. By Adshead and Ramsey. Dragged render to walls, metal roofs. Enclosure of depressed horseshoe shape projecting seaward from the Parade. Parallel to the Parade is a glazed wall with fluted shafts supporting the top beam, embellished with imbricated tenops. This is terminated by rectangular pavillions with heavily swept roofs. A conventional classical cornice is common to the front. Plainer curved walls embrace the changing rooms (to the east) and restaurant (to the west) to either side of the bandstand. This has short flank walls crowned by baskets of fruit and flowers and with applied Greek theatrical masks, and is treated as an open temple of oval plan. The low conical roof is supported by slim paired columns of an attenuated Tower of the Winds type. Flat ceiling with decorative plasterwork. A witty and attractive building which forms a foil to the same architects' Pier Pavilion to which it is a close neighbour. Listing NGR: TQ1474702310 | II | 08-AUG-1985 |
| Marine Parade | THE DOME CINEMA | TQ 1502 WORTHING MARINE PARADE (north side) 753/5/272 The Dome Cinema 31.5.89 GV II* Cinema and bingo hall, originally a multi-purpose kursaal. 1911, by Theophilus Arthur Allen for Carl Adolf Seebold, at a cost of £4,000. Remodelled 1921 by R Kirksby Bowes at cost of ?8,000. Brick, stuccoed at front, otherwise pebble-dashed; dome supported by steel posts. Plain tile roof to front range; otherwise Welsh slate, rear ranges with crested ridge tiles (part removed). Two-storey, five-bay front range, the ground floor projecting and having shops flanking entrance arcade. Above and behind this is the original cinema of 1911, later a ballroom and restaurant and now (in 1996) a bingo hall; in dome over front is former billiard room. To rear is the thirteen-bay deep Coronation Hall, originally used principally as a roller skating rink, concert hall and ballroom; in continuous use as cinema since 1921. Entrance elevation restored in 1995. Mid-C19 shop fronts flank bowed entrance to arcade, the bow supported by columns and formerly with gates; later entrance to first floor to left of bow; parapet. First floor has round-arched windows with glazing bars set between pilasters and linked by impost string. Tower has angle pilasters, platt band, round-arched six-pane windows, octagonal dome and cupola. Right return: two-storey section has round-arched windows on ground floor with radial glazing bars to fanlights and small-pane casements; three-light small-pane casement windows to first floor. Similar windows to one-storey section; some louvred; two ridge louvres. Left return: similar but without the round-arched windows. The interior survives remarkably complete and is full of interest. Entrance arcade has patterned terrazzo floor, incorporating builder's name plate; glazed green tile dado; former shop doors and windows (blocked); glazed double door on left side with small panes originally giving access to first floor; and compartmental ceiling with decorative plasterwork. At rear lies the main entrance, which has arched doorway and side lights, the glazed doors with central roundels and glazing bars, all dating from 1921. Entrance foyer originally an open-air theatre with small balcony and a stage set under semi-dome; the present interior is a complete and lavish remodelling of 1921. Similar doors to those at entrance serve auditorium, and are set in the pine partitioning which separate the former refreshment room (on left) and cloakroom (on right); these have small pane glazing with coloured glass lettering over doors. Main foyer area dominated by large polygonal paybox of 1921, itself a rare feature, with separate smaller kiosk in side passage serving cheap seats in front stalls. All areas with patterned cornices and ceilings. Enriched window architraves, light roundels, brass bannistered stairs up to doorways leading into main auditorium set between etched side mirrors with cameos, swags and sconces. The main auditorium or Coronation Hall retains original balcony to sides with decorative metal balustrade. Original stage with some decoration survives behind later proscenium; this itself obscured behind wide screen installed in 1955 by Goldsmith and Pennells, architects. Viewing boxes at rear now projector and rewind rooms, richly decorated and with cupids and hearts. Decorative ceiling of 1921 and comparable with that in entrance hall; it includes raised semi-domes masking original ventilation system. Shallow raked floor and fixed seating installed in 1921, some seats still the originals and in their original position. The first floor bingo hall opened as a cinema in October 1911 and in 1921 became a ballroom. It has a decorative ceiling, partly concealed, and light bosses. The former restaurant overlooking the sea has a more decorative compartmented ceiling and columns. The Dome is of dual interest as a rare surviving kursaal or multi-purpose hall, with the original plan of a roller skating rink in the main hall. Save for the balcony front, the decoration all dates from the conversion of this hall to a cinema in 1921, and this is both remarkably elaborate and exceptionally complete. The Dome is one of the best five early cinemas to survive in England, and the grading reflects both its architectural and historical interest. Sources Original plans from the cinema and local authority The Worthing Gazette, 19 April 1911 and 26 July 1921 Listing NGR: TQ1506002486 | II* | 31-MAY-1989 |
| Marine Parade | THE PIER (INCLUDING THE PIERFOOT PAVILION AND THE PIERHEAD PAVILION) | In the entry for MARINE PARADE The Pier TQ 1402 SE 4/270 TQ 1502 SW 6/270 The address shall be amended to read MARINE PARADE TQ 1402 SE 4/270 The Pier (including the Pierfoot Pavilion TQ 1502 SW 6/270 and the Pierhead Pavilion) The description should be amended to read Originally 1860-62. Designed by Robert Rawlinson for J Cliff of Bradford. 960 ft long. The neck was widened from 15 ft to 30 ft in 1887-9 and the pierhead enlarged to 105 ft. Pier consists of 24 spans of longitudinal lattice girders supported by cast iron trestles and carrying timber joists for the wooden decking. 'Shoreward or Pierfoot Pavilion 1926. Stucco to walls, metal clad roofs. Consists of a polygonal hall with an oval vestibule on the shoreside, and two square side pavilions joined to it by concave quadrant pilastrades. The vestibule is of 5 bays externally, separated by engaged Corinthian columns over which the entablature breaks. Festooned frieze. Central three bays have glazed double doors with mask keystones. Here the domed roof has 3 glazed oculus dormers, while the domical main roof has bullseye dormers. Delicate iron cresting in the manner of a balustrade. The main roof has a low clerestory with lattice glazing. A plainer cornice carries round the hall. The lower side pavilions have strongly swept mansard roofs with round headed dormers, plain entablatures over Doric pilasters. The pier entrances, in the quadrants, are flanked by engaged Corinthian columns. The detail , a subtle and festive neo-brec, is carried through into the two domed interiors. The Pierhead Pavilion was designed in 1935 by the Borough Architect. It is a handsome and largely unaltered example of the Nautical Style. The shape is a rectangle with rounded ends, with terraces wrapped around a small concert hall. Frame construction clad in metal faced Plymax, using almost continuous glazing of the Crittall type. Asphalt terraces and roofing. Four bay hall with simple proscenium arch surmounted by radiating design. From the outside the main effect is strongly horizontal, created by the projecting decks and cornices. Good mahogany doors which retain some frosted glass panels with wave patterns. Midway Amusement Arcade, 1959, not of special interest on current criteria . ------------------------------------ 1. MARINE PARADE 5406 The Pier TQ 1402 SE 4/270 TQ 1502 SW 6/270 30.7.75 II 2. Originally 1860-62. maimed by Robert Rawlinson for J Cliff of Bradford. 960 ft long. The neck was widened from 15 ft to 30 ft in 1887-9 and the pierhead enlarged to l05 ft. Pier consists of 24 spans of longitudinal lattice girders supported by cast iron trestles end carrying timber joists for the wooden decking. Present buildings (shoreward pavilion, 1926; midway amusement arcade, 1959; and pierhead pavilion, 1935) not of listable interest on current criteria. Owned by local authority. In the descriptive noted for the above entry, the sentence from 'Present buildings ... current criteria.' (lines 4-6) should be amended to read: 'Present buildings are C20 and not of special interest on current criteria.' ------------------------------------------------------------------ MARINE PARADE 1. 5406 The Pier TQ 1402 SE 4/270 TQ 1502 SW 6/270 30.7.75. II 2. originally 1860-62. Designed by Robert Rawlinson for J Cliff of Bradford. 960 ft long. The neck was widened from 15 ft to 30 ft in 1887-9 and the pierhead enlarged to 105 ft. Pier consists of 24 spans of longitudinal lattice girders supported by cast iron trestles and carrying timber joists for the wooden decking. Present buildings (shoreward pavilion, 1926; midway amusement arcade, 1959; and pierhead pavilion, 1935) not of listable interest on current criteria. Owned by local authority. Listing NGR: TQ1498002293 | II | 30-JUL-1975 |
| Marine Parade (74) | - | MARINE PARADE 1. 5406 No 74 TQ 1402 SE 4/5 11.10.49. II GV 2. Early C19. 4 storeys and attic. 2 windows. Stuccoed. Curved bay of 2 windows on all floors except attic. Pilasters at the sides from 2nd to 3rd floors. Cornice and parapet. Mansarded roof with 1 dormer. Wooden balcony with hood on 1st floor. Nos 74 to 79 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1458102334 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Marine Parade (75 and 76) | - | MARINE PARADE 1. 5406 Nos 75 and 76 TQ 1402 SE 4/6 11.10.49. II GV 2. Early C19. 4 storeys and basement. 2 windows each. Stuccoed. Cornice and parapet. Wooden balcony with hood on lst floor. No 75 has a flat front with long and short quoins. No 76 has a curved front with fluted pilasters from the lst to 3rd floors. Glazing bars missing in both. Doorway of No 75 has been modernised since last survey, that of No 76 at the side in New Street has lost its Doric columns and hood supported by large consoles, but retains grooved reveal to arch. Nos 74 to 79 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1458102334 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Marine Parade (77 to 79 consec.) | - | MARINE PARADE 1. 5406 Nos 77 to 79 (consec.) TQ 1402 SE 4/7 11.10.49. II GV 2. Early C19. 4 storeys. Terrace of 3 houses. 8 windows in all. Stuccoed, ground floor of Nos 78-79 rusticated. Curved fronts of 2 windows each. Cornice and parapet. Glazing bars intact. No 77 has a slightly lower facade than Nos 78 and 79, 2 windows only, long and short quoins, no balcony, and one ground floor window made into a door. Nos 78 and 79 are a pair, slightly larger, and have 3 windows each. Since last survey they have lost wooden balconies on the 1st floor with hoods. Stringcourses above 1st and 2nd floors. Nos 74 to 79 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1454402334 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Marine Parade (83) | (INCLUDING RAILINGS) | MARINE PARADE 1. 5406 No 83 (including area railings) TQ 1402 SW 2/98 II 2. Early C19. 3 storeys and basement. Corner site. Main front: 2 sash windows. Right-hand door. Wooden balcony across 1st storey. East front (to West Buildings): 3 sash windows (top middle one blind). Central round-headed doorway with coved voussoir surround. Short railing to area and door steps, with fleur-de-lys finials. Listing NGR: TQ1429202243 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Marine Place | BEDFORD COTTAGE | The following building shall be added to the list; WORTHING MARINE PLACE TQ 15 02 SW (east side) 6/273 Bedford Cottage GV II House. Circa 1800, altered. Coursed rubblestone with yellow and red brick dressings; Welsh slate roof. 2 storeys with attic, 2 bays. Front has yellow- brick quoins, quoined surrounds and arches to opening and stepped dentilled eaves. Doorway on left with narrow window above, a wider window to right on each floor, all openings boarded up. Flat-roofed, boarded-up, dormer. Yellow-brick gable stack to right. Rear: red brick quoins and surrounds, doorway on right; a large window to left on each floor, now with C20 windows, the ground-floor window with cemented lintel and that above altered; eaves rebuilt late C20. Listing NGR: TQ1501102464 | II | 04-APR-1989 |
| Montague Place (10) | - | MONTAGUE PLACE 1. 5406 (West Side) No 10 TQ 1402 SE 4/154 II GV 2. 1802-05, but considerably altered. Originally evidently uniform with Nos 12-14. 4 storeys. Stuccoed. Modillioned cornice with bow. Full-height 3-light sash window. Single right-hand sash window (except 1st floor), with door below, recessed under arch, within modern fluted pilaster strips, and up 5 steps, the 2 lowest having cast iron railings with decorated balusters. Former 1st floor balcony and canopy missing. Nos 10 to 14 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1479802395 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Montague Place (11 to 14 consec) | - | MONTAGUE PLACE 1. 5406 (West Side) - No 11 11.10.49. Nos 12 and 13 TQ 1402 SE 4/12 - No 14 II GV 2. 1802-1805. 4 storeys (Nos 11 and 12 with attic and Nos 12 and 13 with semi-basement). Stuccoed. Curved fronts with window of 3 lights. Nos 11 and 12 have one additional window over the door. Cornice with modillions. No 14 has a parapet and no modillions. Iron balconies on 1st floor (that from No 14 missing). Nos 12 and 14 formerly had hoods to these balconies. Round-headed doorways. Glazing bars intact except on the ground floor. Modern shop fronts to Nos 11 and 14. No 12 has no shop front and therefore is as designed. The glazing bars are intact even on the ground floor. Hooded balcony with thin wooden columns supporting the hood. Recessed round-headed doorway up 5 steps with semi-circular fanlight and 6 panel moulded door, the top panels cut away and glazed. No 13 has lost some of its glazing bars on ground floor and has had this window slightly enlarged downwards. Its balcony has no hood. The doorway is similar and the door intact. Nos 10 to 14 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1479502398 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Montague Street (103) | VICTORIA INN | MONTAGUE STREET 1. 5406 (South Side) Victoria Inn TQ 1402 SE 4/151 II 2. Remodelled early C19 (and again late C19) but perhaps C17 in origin. Possibly timber framed. 2 storeys and attic. North front, on Montague Street: 2 sash windows of Victorian type below dentilled cornice. 4-light casement window in gable, which has shouldered parapet. 2-storey extension to east, with parapet and flat roof. West front: one sash window matching those of north front. Whole ground storey frontage remodelled with glazed tiles and Victorian sashes. Stucco above. Steep pitched slate roof. Interior has ground floor lower than street level. The building leans slightly to the north. Listing NGR: TQ1461602421 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Montague Street (22) | - | MONTAGUE STREET 1. 5406 (North Side) No 22 TQ 1402 SE 4/150 II 2. Early C19. 3 storeys. Stucco-fronted. 4 equally-spaced Ionic pilasters with vigorous finely moulded capitals on upper storeys, the bases masked by the top of the modern shopfront on the ground floor. 3 sash windows (those of the top floor with glazing bars). Parapet above cornice of the entablature. 2-span tiled roof. Listing NGR: TQ1485702481 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Montague Street (80) | BUCKINGHAM ARMS PUBLIC HOUSE | MONTAGUE STREET 1. 5406 (Worth Side) Buckingham Arms Public House TQ 1402 SE 4/149 II 2. Probably circa 1800 or earlier, but much modified. 2 storeys and attics. Stuccoed. M-form roof, with slates, coping to gables and parapet to street on south, over narrow frontage. One sash window with glazing bars. Longer front to Buckingham Road on the east. 4 sash windows with glazing bars (but the 2 left ones blind). 4 casement windows in attic. 2-storey extension to north. Ground floor corner remodelled in the Victorian period. 6 pilasters, fluted in upper sections, paired at ends and to bevelled corner doorway. Listing NGR: TQ1460202437 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Address | Name | Description | Grade | Listing Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North Street (43) | - | NORTH STREET 1. 5406 (North Side) No 43 TQ 1403 17/209 TQ 1503 19/209 II 2. Late C18 or circa 1800. 2 storeys. Mansard roof; all pitches except upper rear (which is slated) of old tiles. Gable chimneys. Rear is of flint with brick quoins, but front is much modified, probably in the early C20. 2-storeyed bow windows, with imitation timbering to the gable heads, either side of central doorway with possibly mid C19 straight hood above (on classical brackets). Listing NGR: TQ1491702982 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Park Crescent | LODGES AND GATEWAY TO PARK CRESCENT | PARK CRESCENT 1. 5406 Lodges and gateway to Park Crescent (formerly listed as The Lodge and Gateway) TQ 1402 NW 1/26A 11.10.49. II* GV 2. Gateway of 3 caryatid arches, the central one for carriages, the side ones for pedestrians. Pair of lodges linked to gate by short sections of wall, with cornice, which is continued round one-storey lodges and over round-headed window in each. Hipped slate roofs. Nos 1 to 14 (consec.) and the gateway and lodges form a group with Beechwood Hall. Listing NGR: TQ1436702811 | II* | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Park Crescent | BEECHWOOD HALL | PARK CRESCENT 1. 5406 Beechwood Hall TQ 1402 NW 1/27 11.10.49. II GV 2. Private Hotel. This is approached from Wykeham Road but it was actually built as part of Park Crescent as North and South Swiss Cottages, presumably at the same date and by the same architect. 2 storeys, attic and basement. Faced with roughcast. Red tiled roof. The roof sweeps right down to the ground floor on south side and forms a veranda with square trellised wooden columns and cornice. Window with oriental shaped lights copied from the Pavilion, Brighton. Projecting porches on east front (the main centre one modern)with rustic wooden balconies above them and an outside staircase to one of them. Hipped gables with scalloped bargeboards. Dormer windows on 2nd floor probably added. One pointed turret. Chimneys with twisted or zig-zag ornamentation. Nos 1 to 14 (consec.) and the gateway and lodges form a group with Beechwood Hall. Listing NGR: TQ1422302838 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Park Crescent (1 to 14 consec.) | - | PARK CRESCENT 1. 5406 Nos 1 to 14 (consec.) TQ 1402 NW 1/26 11.10.49. II* GV 2. 1829-1830. Amon Henry Wilds Architect. 3 storeys. 3 windows each. Stuccoed. The houses are built in 3s. Each centre house projects with pilasters from ground to 1st floor having Corinthian capitals with honeysuckle leaves in the centre of them, entablature above with garland ornamentation to the frieze, then 2nd storey with small plain pilasters, round-headed windows and pediment above. The outer houses have only a stringcourse above the ground floor, cornice above 1st floor with garland ornamentation in frieze and a castellation effect to form a sort of balustrade in front of 2nd floor windows. The outside window of these outer houses is set back and on the ground floor there are pairs of porches with caryatid columns and balcony above. Some of these balconies have been glazed. Some of the houses have had iron balconies added. Windows in frames, the ground floor ones with entablatures over, those in the central houses with semi-circular panels over them. Some glazing bars missing. Rectangular fanlights to all doors. Nos 1 to 14 (consec.) and the gateway and lodges form a group with Beechwood Hall. Listing NGR: TQ1430102892 | II* | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Parklands Avenue | COURTLANDS HOSPITAL | TQ 10 SW PARKLANDS AVENUE (West side), West Worthing 24/90 Courtlands Hospital 23.7.74 II Originally house, later hospital. Early C19 reworked in early C20. Brick with stone dressings and slate roof with brick chimneystacks. A large rambling 2 and 3 storeyed building, greatly altered and added to and possibly with an older core. The North front has a columned porch. The pilasters and iron-work on the south front are said to be re-used Adam features. The East front has a projecting bay on columns. The interior was re-furbished in the earlyC20 and has reused C18 features. The iron balustered staircase is said to be by Adam and the hall has plasterwork in the Adam style, there is a C20 marble floor and C18 marble fireplace with panel of cherubs, alternate glyphs and paterae, corner urns and fluted pilasters. There is a painted glass dome in the Adam style said to have come from the 1788 Cordwainers Hall, No 7 Cannon Street in the City of London on its demolition in 1909 but most likely to be of the latter date. The Queen Ann~ Room has early C20 oak panelling. The Drawing Room is later C18 with gilding, pilasters, mirrors and an exceedingly fine coffered ceiling enriched with rosettes and moulding which is not in situ as one end covers over a bow window the width of the house. There is a tradition that the ceiling came from Paris but it is possible that this room could be part of Sylvanus Hall's work for the Cordwainers Hall of 1788, which was demolished in 1909. The L-shaped part of the hospital to the right is not of special architectural interest. Source: Howard Colvin "A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects. 1600-1840. Third edition 1995 p449. The previous list entry read: PARKLANDS AVENUE 1. 5406 (West Side) West Worthing Courtlands Hospital TQ 10 SW 24/90 23.7.74. II 2. Early C19. Brick with stone dressings. A large rambling 2 and 3 storeyed building, greatly altered and added to and possibly with an older core. The North front has a columned porch. The pilasters and iron-work on the south front are said to be re-used Adam features. The East front has a projecting bay on columns. The main interests of the house are the re-used interior features. The staircase is said to be by Adam and the hall has plasterwork in the Adam style. There is a painted glass dome in the Adam style said to have come from Cordwainers Hall on its demolition in 1904. The Drawing room is in the French style of the mid C18, and the ceiling is said to have come from Paris. The L-shaped part of the hospital to the right is not of special architectural interest. Listing NGR: TQ1190402503 | II | 23-JUL-1974 |
| Parklands Avenue | SUNDIAL SITUATED TO THE EAST OF COURTLANDS HOUSE | TQ 10 SW WORTHING PARKLANDS AVENUE 753/24/10015 Sundial situated to the east of Courtlands House GV II Sundial. Stone. Early C20 in the style of the C18. Some repair. Rectangular pedestal with swagged die surmounted by an enriched baluster crowned by a cube with dials and gnomons to four faces. Listing NGR: TQ1194302510 | II | 06-MAY-1997 |
| Parklands Avenue | GAZEBO AT COURTLANDS TO THE EAST OF THE HOUSE | TQ 10 SW WORTHING PARKLANDS AVENUE 753/24/10031 Gazebo at Courtlands to the east of the House GV II Gazebo terminating the terrace (qv) on the south, garden front of Courtlands (qv). Early C20. Probably brick, rendered with stone quoins and dressings. Slated hipped roof with stone modillion eaves cornice. Rectangular plan. Classical style. West front has a distyle screen flanked by tall pilasters to small-paned French doors with radial fanlight and keystone. North front with an oculus. Listing NGR: TQ1194302484 | II | 09-DEC-1998 |
| Parklands Avenue | GARDEN ARCHWAY AT COURTLANDS, SOUTH WEST FORMAL GARDEN | TQ 10 SW WORTHING PARKLANDS AVENUE 753/24/10032 Garden Archway at Courtlands, south west Formal garden GV II Garden archway to the south west formal garden at Courtlands (qv). Early C20. Dressed stone. Classical style. 2 pillars with console bracketed buttresses and ball finials flank a moulded archway with keystone. Listing NGR: TQ1193202500 | II | 09-DEC-1998 |
| Parklands Avenue | BALUSTRADED TERRACE TO THE REAR OF THE HOUSE AT COURTLANDS | TQ 10 SW WORTHING PARKLANDS AVENUE 753/24/10033 Balustraded Terrace to the rear of the house at Courtlands GV II Balustraded terrace running along the south, garden front of Courtlands (qv) to the Gazebo (qv). Early C20. Stone paved with yellow brick retaining walls topped by a stone balustrade of balusters and dies. Stone steps at east and west ends flanked by dies surmounted by obelisks. Listing NGR: TQ1193102496 | II | 09-DEC-1998 |
| Pond Lane | THATCHED COTTAGE | POND LANE 1. 5406 Durrington TQ 10 W 23/223 Durringmere In the above entry: Durringmere shall be amended to read Thatched Cottage ------------------------------------ POND LANE 1. 5406 Durrington Durringmere TQ 10 NW 23/223 II 2. Probably C18, possibly with earlier interior features. Painted flint with brick dressings. Thatched, hipped at west end. 2 storeys. Irregular fenestration. One window in east end. North front: left-hand porch with thatched gable and small windows in sides. One window in upper floor, 4 below (including to extension under roof slope at right end). Small chimney at top of hip. All windows are modern casements. Listing NGR: TQ1182805051 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Portland Road | CHRIST CHURCH SCHOOL (NOW REPS HEALTH STUDIOS) | PORTLAND ROAD 1. 5406 (West Side) Christ Church School TQ 1402 NE 3/24A 23.7.74. II 2. H-shaped building of circa 1850. 2 storeys. 4 windows. Faced with knapped flints with stone dressings and quoins. Slate roof. Pointed casement windows. The gabled wings have single pointed lights on the 1st floor and 2 lights on the ground floor. 2 gables between the wings, each containing a large pointed window of 3 lights. Small central projection almost like a tower with a gable below it and a pointed doorway. Listing NGR: TQ1469302704 | II | 23-JUL-1974 |
| Portland Road (116) | - | PORTLAND ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) No 116 TQ 1402 NE 3/122 II 2. Facing Field Row (a footpath). Probably circa 1800. Semi-detached with No 118 and possibly built together with it. 2 storeys and basement. 2 widely spaced symmetrically arranged sash windows, with glazing bars, nearly flush, with moulded wooden surrounds. (Basement windows horizontal sashes with glazing bars). Stucco front. Central 6-panel door with overlight. Rear west front faces Portland Street across front garden. 2 small windows, the upper ones modern, the lower sashes with glazing bars. Rendered. Single-span roof, with modern tiles to west. Later C19 wing at south end of west side. Listing NGR: TQ1472302764 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Portland Road (118) | - | PORTLAND ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) No 118 TQ 1402 NE 3/123 II 2. Probably circa 1800. Semi-detached with No 116 and possibly built together with it, but with later alterations. 2 storeys and basement. 2 widely-spaced, symmetrically arranged sash windows (with glazing bars); larger than those of No 116, flush and with moulded wooden surrounds. (Left basement window a Victorian sash and right a casement). Stucco front. Parapet, probably added. Later central projection, with 2 small round-headed windows on each floor and door on south side (with 6 panels, top 4 fielded). North end shows flint and brick construction. 2-span roof. Rear, west front has modern projecting ground storey with terrace over (and further projection on north, abutting premises fronting Portland Street). 2 widely-spaced windows with glazing bars in upper sashes. Off-centre door to terrace. Ashlared stucco. Projecting eaves with small widely-spaced brackets. Listing NGR: TQ1472102772 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Portland Road (75) | - | PORTLAND ROAD 1. 5406 (West Side) No 75 TQ 1402 NE 3/117 II GV 2. Before 1814. 3 storeys and attic. Evidently of same build as Nos 77 and 79. Painted grey headers. Brick modillion eaves cornice. Replacement tile roof (with one casement dormer). One sash window with glazing bars. Later shopfront. Nos 75 to 89 (odd) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1471202625 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Portland Road (77 and 79) | - | PORTLAND ROAD 1. 5406 (West Side) Nos 77 and 79 TQ 1402 NE 3/116 II GV Before 1814. 3 storeys and attic. Grey headers and yellow-coloured brick window surrounds. 2 sashes each house, with glazing bars but the left hand ones narrower and blind, except on 1st storey of No 77, and on ground floor, where there are doors (that of No 79 recessed; No 77 having an additional door, probably to through passage). Slate roof, with dormer to each house (No 77 a casement, No 79 sash with glazing bars). Nos 75 to 89 (odd) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1471102632 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Portland Road (79 and 81) | HARE AND HOUNDS PUBLIC HOUSE | PORTLAND ROAD 1. 5406 (West Side) No 81 (Hare and Hounds Public House) TQ 1402 NE 3/115 II GV 2. Before 1814. 3 storeys. One window: a sash with glazing bars on top floor, a casement on the middle floor. Victorian pub front on ground floor with pairs of pilasters flanking side doors and moulded brackets at ends; central window over panel. A sash dormer with glazing bars. Painted cobbles, with brick quoins, window surrounds and modillion eaves cornice. Nos 75 to 89 (odd) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1471102635 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Portland Road (83 and 85) | - | PORTLAND ROAD 1. 5406 (West Side) Nos 83 and 85 TQ 1402 NE 3/114 II GV 2. Before 1814. 3 storeys and attics. Stucco-fronted. Slate mansard roof. 3-light sash bay window on 1st and 2nd storey to each house (sash windows below these). Shared blind windows between these (with round-headed through-passage doorway below); and blind windows at outer ends, over doorways. Casement dormer to each (that of No 85 modern). Nos 75 to 89 (odd) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1471102653 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Portland Road (87) | - | PORTLAND ROAD 1. 5406 (West Side) No 87 TQ 1402 NE 3/113 II GV 2. Before 1814. Of the same build as the Hare and Hounds. 3 storeys and attic. Painted cobbles with brick quoins, window surrounds and modillion eaves cornice. One window (narrower than Hare and Hounds, with modern casements) right of centre. Left-hand modern door. No dormer. Nos 75 to 89 (odd) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1471002659 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Portland Road (89) | - | PORTLAND ROAD 1. 5406 (West Side) No 89 TQ 1402 NE 3/112 II GV 2. Before 1814. Juts out beyond building line of Nos 75-87. The east of a pair of cottages at right-angles to the road. 2 storeys, Rendered. Slate hipped roof. 2 sash windows with glazing bars above and larger one off-centre below, with right-hand door. Nos 75 to 89 (odd) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1471502668 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Portland Road (90 to 94 even) | - | PORTLAND ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) Nos 90 to 94 (even) TQ 1402 NE 3/119 II 2. Before 1814. 3 storeys. Stucco-fronted. Slate roofs except No 90 (renewed). One window each (sashes without glazing bars or casements, except No 90 which has modern sashes with glazing bars). Shallow porches in form of ogee arches. Listing NGR: TQ1473402687 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Prospect Place (1 and 1A) | - | PROSPECT PLACE TQ 1402 SW 4/153 Nos 1 & lA GV II House, shop and industrial premises. 1820-30. Faced with cobbles with mainly painted brick dressings, patch of C20 brick infill and slate roof, hipped to left and end right cemented chimneystack. 2 storeys, attics and semi-basement: 3 windows. Roof has 2 flat roofed dormers with fixed casements. 1st floor has 2 original early C19 20 pane sashes with wooden architraves with cambered heads. Ground floor has central 20 pane sash with semi-basement opening beneath, both with cambered heads. Left side doorcase has round-headed arch with reveals, semi-circular fanlight and 4 panelled door with integral fanlight. 4 stone steps. Right hand side has later C19 shopfront with continuous glazing above (8 x 2 panes) above a shopfront with 6 panes and left side doorcase with 2 fielded panels and glass above. Long west extension of same period of 1 storey with continuos window at top of wall, otherwise sash windows. Listing NGR: TQ1461602384 | II | 11-MAR-1988 |
| Prospect Place (10 to 18 even) | - | PROSPECT PLACE 1. 5406 (East Side) Nos 10 to 18 (even) TQ 1402 SE 4/152 10.11.75. II GV 2. Probably before 1814. Terrace cottages. 3 storeys and attic. One sash window each (without glazing bars and some modified). All ground floor windows enlarged except that of No 16. Right-hand doors, all modern except that of No 10, which is of 6 panels, bottom pair moulded, the next fielded and the top glazed. Nos 10 and 12 are stucco-fronted; Nos 14-18 of cobbles, with painted brick quoins to openings and between houses. All have painted brick modillion eaves cornice, to front and rear except to front of No 10. Nos 10 to 18 (even) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1462002390 | II | 10-NOV-1975 |
| Railway Approach | THE ORIGINAL WORTHING RAILWAY STATION | RAILWAY APPROACH 1. 5406 The Original Worthing Railway Station TQ 1403 17/86 25.8.71. II 2. Built in 1845 when the Brighton to Portsmouth line was constructed. Converted into 2 cottages after 1859, when a new Station was built further west. 2 storeys. 5 windows. Faced with cobbles with red brick dressings and long and short quoins to each window bay. Eaves cornice. Slate roof. Casement windows. Listing NGR: TQ1461803370 | II | 25-AUG-1971 |
| Railway Approach (27) | CHAPMANS | WORTHING TQ 1403 RAILWAY APPROACH (east side) 753/17/10026 Chapmans II Includes: Chapmans, OXFORD ROAD Alternatively known as: Central Hotel, RAILWAY APPROACH. Hotel and public house. c1900 with some late C20 alterations and extensions to rear. Vernacular Revival style of red brick in English bond with timber-framed gables with plastered infi1l and tiled roof with tall brick chimneystacks. EXTERIOR: the principal feature is a 3-storey octagonal corner turret with ogee-shaped tiled dome with finial. Arched doorcase below into Public Bar. Remainder of2 storeys and attics. Elevation to Station Approach has 4 gables, one projecting, with two single and two double doors and frosted glass to all windows on ground floor. Elevation to Oxford Road has one gable with timber-framing, 6-light window to second floor, 4-light window to first floor and 2 half-glazed doors and 2 windows all with cambered headed windows with stained glass fanlights with leaf decoration and frosted glass windows. Late C20 conservatory to rear. INTERIOR: public bar retains lincrusta ceiling, 2 Tuscan columns painted to represent marble, mahogany dado panelling, wooden partition with engraved glass panels, large wooden clock, tiled fireplace, bar fitment with round-headed arches and original counter with floor tiling in front of it. Staircase hall has well staircase with widely spaced balusters. Listing NGR: TQ1452703318 | II | 01-SEP-1997 |
| Richmond Road | ST MARY'S ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH | RICHMOND ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) St Mary's Roman Catholic Church TQ 1402 NW 1/104 II GV 2. 1864. Attributed to Henry Clutton. Interior and additions to exterior circa 1939. Plum-red brick, as the adjacent convent which is part of the composition. Steep tiled roof. Plate tracery. Rose windows in east end (ritual west) and north transept. 3 lancets in choir end. North side fronts Richmond Road, east end Crescent Road and south side abuts the Convent. North aisle and clerestorey have lancet windows. Projecting porch with double arches on colonettes and belfry with miniature spire on north side, together with modern single-storey extension. Interior very plain. St Mary's Roman Catholic Church and No 39 form a group with Our Lady of Sion Convent, and the wall extending south, Crescent Road. Listing NGR: TQ1441502779 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Richmond Road (39) | THE PARISH ROOMS (ST CHRISTOPHER'S REPOSITORY),ST MARY'S ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH | RICMOND ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) TQ 1402 NW 1/103 No 39 (saint Christopher's) In the above entry: No 39 (Saint Christopher's) shall be amended to read: The Parish Rooms (St Christopher's Repository), St Mary's Roman Catholic Church ------------------------------------ RICHMOND ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) No 39 (Saint Christopher's) TQ 1402 NW 1/103 II GV 2. Evidently contemporary with St Mary's Church, being part of the composition and of the same materials (including the banding and brick eaves nogging of the convent). 2 storeys. West side; 2 sash windows, the left-hand 3-light, the right-hand one-light. The lower left window projects (and has casements) east side: one sash window either side of the door, and one on right-hand dormer window above. Tiled roof. St Mary's Roman Catholic Church and No 39 form a group with Our Lady of Sion Convent, and the wall extending south, Crescent Road. Listing NGR: TQ1440602794 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Richmond Road (52, 52A and 52B) | - | RICHMOND ROAD 1. 5406 No 52, 52A and 52B TQ 1402 NE 3/27 II G.V. House. 1843, by Charles Hide (1810-1876) architect and town surveyor of Worthing. Whitewashed stone rubble, cement render and pebbledash, old tiled roofs. Tudor Gothic style. 2 storeys with attics. Entrance front has 2 4-centred windows at west, one 3 light mullioned and transomed battlemented bay window at east. 2 first floor 2 light casements, one central 2 light casement, one gabled 2 light casement. Central 4-centred arched door with above jettied first floor part timber part painted plaster to imitate studwork bay projection with barge boarded gable. Prominent external chimney breast, corbelled out at first floor 2 twisted stacks. West returned gable has ground floor rectangular bay window, first floor jettied upper gable with painted stud work and elaborate barge boarded gable. Roof hipped at east with battlemented parapet and twisted stacks. 2 storeys wing at canted angle at east has ground floor cross window, first floor 3-light casement, jettied east gable, barge boards. Garden front (north) has returned gable wing at west, large ground floor bay windows. Pebble dashed, slate roofed, 2 storey service wing at rear (No 52A). INTERIOR: 'L' plan ground floor hall with dog-leg staircase with Gothic newels and classical iron balusters. Walls scored for stucco lining, now painted. Doorcases with rusticated surrounds, plaster labels and heads, 3 panel doors with 2 upper 4- centred arches and lower quatrefoil panel tracery. Front door same details with 2 leaded side-lights. Panelled and ribbed ground floor and first floor landing ceiling. Labelled and rusticated opening on half landing. 2 reception rooms of hall with Gothic plaster ceilings, with frieze and cornices, panelled window embrasures. Fireplaces missing throughout. Details in service wing suggest build of same date as house (c1840). An ambitious villa antedating the main development of Worthing, remarkably in a Tudor-Gothic style, picturesquely contrasting with the neighbouring neoclassical villas. Called Gothic Lodge and Tudor Court at various periods. See H Smail Worthing Map Story (1949) p 129 and Edward Snewin and H Smail Glimpses of Old Worthing (1945) p 87; Builder XXXIV, 1876, p 645. Listing NGR: TQ1456502872 | II | 06-NOV-1986 |
| Richmond Road (54) | GATEPIERS OF NUMBER 54 TO THE SOUTH | RICHMOND ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Gatepiers of No 54 to the south TQ 1402 NE 3/107B II 2. Probably contemporary with the house. Stucco-faced. Square, with Grecian moulded caps, having pediments on each side. Listing NGR: TQ1454002829 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Richmond Road (54) | - | RICHMOND ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) No 54 TQ 1402 NE 3/107 II 2. Probably part of the same development as Heslington House and circa 1845. A substantial villa set back in its own garden, alongside Heslington House. Stucco. A picturesque composition of Italian flavour. Left section 3-storey, right 2-storey. Continuous frieze and cornice at eaves level of the latter. Hipped slate roofs. Central semi-circular projection on 2 storeys beneath painted dome, with 4 pilasters supporting architrave on each storey, the entrance (and windows above) being in the wider, central bay. Single matching casement in flanking sections (except for 3-light one on ground floor left hand). Both ground floor windows have straight bracketed hoods. 3rd storey of left section has 3-light blind window under triple arch. There is a 2-storey extension to the right. Listing NGR: TQ1453002872 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Richmond Road (54) | SECTION OF WALL BOUNDING GARDEN OF NUMBER 54 TO THE EAST | RICHMOND ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Section of wall bounding garden of No 54 to the east TQ 1402 NE 3/107A II 2. Flint. Probably earlier than the house. Listing NGR: TQ1453802870 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Richmond Road (56) | HESLINGTON HOUSE | RICHMOND ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) No 56 (Heslington House) TQ 1402 NW 1/25 TQ 1402 NE 3/25 II 2. About 1845. 2 storeys, 5 windows and extension of 2 windows to north-east. Stuccoed. Cornice and high parapet with pediment in it. Large flat hood to door added later. The south-west side has 2 windows with pediment over. Listing NGR: TQ1450502858 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Salvington Road | SALVINGTON LETTS (OLD SUSSEX COTTAGE) | SALVINGTON ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Durrington Salvington Letts (Old Sussex Cottage) TQ 1205 10/75 11.10.49. II GV 2. (This is the real name of the house, but in the Rate-books it is entered as Old Sussex Cottage). C17. 2 storeys. 4 windows. Squared flints with red brick dressings and stringcourse. Red tiled roof. Modern casement windows. Extension of 3 windows to west. All the listed buildings at Salvington Letts form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1272205203 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Salvington Road | OUTBUILDING TO NORTH WEST OF SALVINGTON LETTS | SALVINGTON ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Durrington Outbuilding to north-west of Salvington Letts TQ 1205 10/175 II GV 2. Perhaps C18. Flint and some brick. Hipped, pantiled roof. Oblong. Single-storey height. All the listed buildings at Salvington Letts form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1275005214 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Salvington Road | BARN TO WEST OF SALVINGTON LETTS, WITH OUTBUILDING AS CROSS RANGE | SALVINGTON ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Durrington Barn to west of Salvington Letts, with outbuilding as cross-range TQ 1205 10/176 II GV 2. Probably circa 1800. Flint with brick dressings. Slate roofs. Both double doors of barn blocked. All the listed buildings at Salvington Letts form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1273305201 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Salvington Road | ROSE COTTAGE | SALVINGTON ROAD TQ 10 NW DURRINGTON 23/221 Rose Cottage GV II Cottage c1723, extended 1808 with C19 casements. Faced with knapped flint with red brick dressings. Tiled roof with 3 brick chimney-stacks, 2 storeys 3 windows to main part of cottage. C19 casements. End quoins, aprons under 1st floor windows and plinth. Later door to right hand side is original brick surround. Right hand side has addition of 1 bay in matching-materials dated 1808 with the initials 0 and T A. (0 standing for Overington). Left side addition of 1 bay which is rendered. 2 gables to rear elevation. Interior has brick open fireplace with wooden bressumer with lamb's tongue stop and spice cupboard. Large axial beam but some of the floor joists are rough poles. Listing NGR: TQ1192905248 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Salvington Road | BOUNDARY WALL ENCLOSING THE PREMISES OF MESSRS OVERRINGTON TO THE WEST AND TO THE NORTH (THE LATTER RETURN STRETCH ON THE EAST TO ABUT THE COTTAGE RANGE AND ALSO HAVING A SHORT EXTENSION TO THE WEST, TO ABUT DURRINGTON HILL) | SALVINGTON ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Durrington Boundary wall enclosing the premises of Messrs Overrington to the west and to the north (the latter having a return stretch on the east to abut the cottage range and also having a short extension to the west, to abut Durrington Hill) TQ 10 NW 23/222 20.10.75. II 2. Probably C18. Of flint and some brick, but rendered on the north stretch. A modern workshop abuts the middle section of the west stretch. Listing NGR: TQ1191405238 | II | 20-OCT-1975 |
| Salvington Road | FRONT GARDEN WALL OF SALVINGTON LETTS, TO EAST, SOUTH AND WEST WITH PIERS | SALVINGTON ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Durrington Front garden wall of Salvington Letts, to east, south and west with piers TQ 1205 10/174 II GV 2. Probably early C19. Low flint wall stone coping and piers of flint with brick dressings. All the listed buildings at Salvington Letts form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1277805192 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Salvington Road | OUTBUILDING ALONG ROAD IMMEDIATELY TO WEST OF SALVINGTON LETTS, ADJACENT TO BARN | SALVINGTON ROAD 1. 5406 (North Side) Durrington Outbuilding along road immediately to west of Salvington Letts, adjacent to barn TQ 1205 10/177 II GV 2. Probably circa 1800. Flint, with brick dressings. Mostly open on inner north side. Hipped slate roof. All the listed buildings at Salvington Letts form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1273605184 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Selden Lane (1 to 3 consec.) | - | SELDEN LANE 1. 5406 (West Side) Nos 1 to 3 (consec.) TQ 1502 NE 7/161 II GV 2. Early to mid C19. In appearance, a pair of cottages. 2 storeys. Big flints with ample brick surrounds to openings and vertical quoining between the cottages. 2 sash windows each with glazing bars, with doors nearly below the outer ones. Slate roof with gable chimneys. Nos 1 to 3 (consec.), and the garden wall to Nos 1 to 3 (consec.), form a group with Nos 4 and 5 and the garden wall to Nos 4 and 5 which are of local interest. Listing NGR: TQ1573902874 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Selden Lane (1 to 3 consec.) | FRONT GARDEN WALL TO EAST ALONG STREET, OF NUMBERS 1 TO 3 | SELDEN LANE 1. 5406 (West Side) Front garden wall to east along street, of Nos 1 to 3 (consec.) TQ 1502 NE 7/161A II GV 2. Probably contemporary with cottages. Low cobble wall to front garden along street. Nos 1 to 3 (consec.), and the garden wall to Nos 1 to 3 (consec.), form a group with Nos 4 and 5 and the garden wall to Nos 4 and 5 which are of local interest. Listing NGR: TQ1574602884 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Smugglers Walk (14) | SMUGGLER'S FARM | 1. SMUGGLER'S WALK 5406 West Worthing Smuggler's Farm TQ 1202 13/85 II 2. The original portion is the south wing, which is a timber-framed cottage, the exterior of which is now plastered. The lower fringe of the roof is of Horsham Slabs, but most of it is tiled. Casement windows. 2 storeys. 4 windows. The West Sussex County Council Record Office says that the building was sold in 1522. Behind to the north-west is an L-wing composed of 2 parallel ranges which were added in the C18. These are of much higher elevation and are faced with cobbles and knapped flints with red brick window dressings and quoins. Tiled roof. Casement windows. 2 storeys. 2 windows facing east. Listing NGR: TQ1226502128 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| South Farm Road | SOUTH FARM COTTAGES (1 to 4) | SOUTH FARM ROAD 1. 5406 (West Side) Nos 1 to 4 (consec.) South Farm Cottages TQ 1404 16/200 17.2.76. II 2. Dated 1720. A symmetrical range at right-angles to the road. 2 storeys and attic. Coursed flints with brick bands above storeys. South fronts 2 paired casement windows each side of centre. Middle cottages have doors at inner ends, outer ones have them at the outer ends. North front: the same but larger ground-floor windows and 2 casement dormers. Steep, slated roof. 2 ridge chimneys. Quoining to corners and down centre. One casement in east gable. Many of the casements have probably early slender metal glazing bars. Listing NGR: TQ1420204103 | II | 17-FEB-1976 |
| South Farm Road | GATEWAY AND CHAPELS OF BROADWATER CEMETERY, TOGETHER WITH TOMBS OF RICHARD JEFFERIES,(NEAR MIDDLE OF CEMETERY) AND WH HUDSON (ON SOUTH SIDE) | SOUTH FARM ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) Gateway and chapels of Broadwater Cemetery, together with tombs of Richard Jefferies, (near middle of cemetery) and W H Hudson (on south side) TQ 1404 16/201 II 2. Probably circa 1870. An H-shaped Gothic Revival entrance gate incorporating Church of England Chapel (on north) and Nonconformist Chapel (on south). Both chapels are out of use, that on the south now being used as cemetery workshed. Random rubble of variegated colours, with masonry dressings. Chapels present gables to east and west having large windows with Decorated tracery to the east and lancets to tile west. Arch on corbels to passage through cross range with Tuscan inscription on tablet over. Both tombs are simple with plain marble kerbs. Richard Jefferies (1848-1887) was a novelist and essayist mostly with naturalistic themes. W H Hudson (1841-1922) was also a naturalist and writer. See Dictionary of National Biography. Listing NGR: TQ1421004396 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| South Street (41 and 43) | LLOYD'S BANK | SOUTH STREET 1. 5406 (West Side) Nos 41 and 43 (Lloyd's Bank) TQ 1402 NE 3/126 II 2. Circa 1870. Partly included for its very prominent position at the crossroads between the 2 main streets of the centre of the town. The facade is in 4 straight sections angled round the curve between South Street and Liverpool Road. 3 storeys and attic. Stuccoed. 8 sash windows, 2 to each section, enclosed within an order of 18½ fluted polished granite Corinthian pilasters (paired at ends of each section and to left-hand doorway), supporting entablature and parapet (with 3 pairs of openings for dormers). Moulded frames and pendants to 2nd floor windows. Segmental pediments on brackets to 1st floor windows. Moulded arches on imposts to ground-floor windows, with fielded panels below. Listing NGR: TQ1490802587 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| South Street Tarring | MARKET HOUSE (1, 2 AND 3) | 1. CHURCH ROAD 5406 (South Side) West Tarring TQ 1304 SW 15/266 Nos 1, 2 and 3 Market House In the above entry: CHURCH ROAD (South Side) West Tarring shall be amended to read: SOUTH STREET West Tarring ------------------------------------ CHURCH ROAD 1. 5406 (South Side) West Tarring Nos 1, 2 and 3 Market House TQ 1304 SW 15/226 II GV 2. Probably late C18. Occupying a prominent position opposite the end of the High Street. Symmetrical. 2 storeys. Grey headers with red quoining and window surrounds. 4 widely-spaced sash windows with glazing bars. 3 Victorian shopfronts, middle one beneath 2 middle windows; end ones with doors at inner ends, middle with 2 right-hand doors (6 fielded panels). Projecting moulded cornice to shops. Steep tiled roof (renewed). Nos 1, 2 and 3 Market House and Nos 54 to 58 (even) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1339603348 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| South Street Tarring | BISHOP'S GARTH | SOUTH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring Bishop's Garth TQ 1303 12/185 II 2. A symmetrical house, probably of the later C18. 2 storeys. 2 widely-spaced casement windows, the lower ones with cambered heads. Flint with brick dressings. Brick modillion eaves cornice. Steepish tiled roof with gable chimneys. Central doorway with cambered head. Listing NGR: TQ1326703962 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| South Street Tarring | THE OLD PALACE | SOUTH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring The Old Palace TQ 1304 SW 15/58 11.10.49. I 2. Remains of a C13 house with C15 hall, built on the site of Archbishop Becket's Palace. Converted into the Rectory at the Reformation and since the erection of the modern Rectory used as the Parish Hall. T-shaped flint and rubble building with stone quoins and frames to windows and doors. Gable at east end. South and west sides have buttresses. C15 2-light cinquefoil headed windows with stone mullions and transoms. C13 lancet window in south wing. Horsham stone slate roof, the upper portion renewed with red tiles. Listing NGR: TQ1327204010 | I | 11-OCT-1949 |
| South Street Tarring | DOVECOTE TO SOUTH OF THE OLD PALACE | SOUTH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring Dovecote to south of the Old Palace TQ 1303 12/227 1.9.75. II* 2. Attributed in origin to before 1250. Referred to in a document of 1313. Present building probably C18. Exterior of cobble with brick corners, interior of brick niche-work. Square, with tiled roof, hipped all round but rising into a short ridge with the usual 2 gablets. Door to south, (renewed) casement to west, both with cambered brick heads. Listing NGR: TQ1327303989 | II* | 01-SEP-1975 |
| South Street Tarring | THE PENDULES | SOUTH STREET 1. 5406 (West Side) West Tarring The Pendules TQ 1303 12/57 II 2. Early C19. 2 storeys. 2 windows. Stuccoed. Small cornice with modillions below eaves. Slate roof. Stuccoed porch with 6 panel moulded door, the top 2 panels cut away and glazed. Listing NGR: TQ1327703824 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| South Street Tarring (100) | FOLLY TO REAR OF NUMBER 100 | The following building shall be added to the list:- WORTHING SOUTH STREET TQ 1203 & TQ 1303 (east side) West Tarring 12/226 Folly to rear of No 100 GV II Folly. Early C19 heightened mid C19; altered later C19 and C20. Coursed cobblestone with brick dressings; roof material not visible. A single cell, square on plan, of 2 storeys with basement. Brick quoins to angles and openings, brick band between storeys, eaves cornice and embattled parapet with pitched coping. On lower floors the brick is red, with some blue bricks; on upper floor it is paler and this and the slightly differently-laid cobble indicates that the upper storey is of a different build. Entrance elevation: segmental-arched basement opening; above this, cantilevered stone steps rise to doorway which has C20 stable door below inserted soldier-brick arch a blocked pointed-arched window on left. Upper floor has a later, wide, 3-light window with header-brick arch and wooden casements with pointed-arched glazing bars. Rear: a pointed-arched window to ground floor with two 4-pane lights and glazing bars in head; upper storey has segmental-arched casement with pointed- arched glazing bars. Right return: pointed-arched casement to upper storey with red brick surround. Left return: pointed-arched window to lower storey; wide 3-light window above as front. Listing NGR: TQ1339403626 | II | 24-JUL-1989 |
| South Street Tarring (92) | NUMBER 92, INCLUDING LOW WALL TO FRONT GARDEN | SOUTH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring No 92, including low wall to front garden TQ 1303 12/56 II 2. Early C19. 2 storeys. 3 sash windows (with modern glazing bars). Central doorway with neo-Georgian pedimented case and door, replacing previous stuccoed porch. Slate roof. Brick modillion eaves cornice, over flint front with red brick dressings. Low cobble wall to narrow front garden, with flat stone cope, and entrance piers with low-pyramid coping stones, probably contemporary with house. Listing NGR: TQ1334903603 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| South Street Tarring (94 and 96) | NUMBER 96,INCLUDING LOW WALL TO FRONT GARDEN | SOUTH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring Nos 94 and 96 including TQ 1303 12/184 low wall to front gardens II 2. A pair abutting No 92. Early C19. 2 storeys. Flint end red brick dressings. Slate roof. Brick modillion eaves cornice. Gable chimney to go 96. No 94 has one window and left-hand door. No 96 has 2 windows (the lower right one a door). Both have low flint wall to street with flat stone coping. The above entry shall be mended to reads 1. 5406 SOUTH STREET (East Side) West Tarring No 96, including low wall TQ 1303 12/184 to front garden II 2. An early C19 pair of houses, now united. 2 storeys. Flint with red brick dressings. 3 windows. Door below second window and to left of 3rd. Slate roof. Brick modillion eaves cornice. Abutting No 92 on right; gable chimney on left. Low flint wall to street with flat stone coping. ------------------------------------ SOUTH STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) West Tarring Nos 94 and 96 including low wall to front gardens TQ 1303 12/184 II 2. A pair abutting No 92. Early C19. 2 storeys. Flint and red brick dressings. Slate roof. Brick modillion eaves cornice. Gable chimney to No 96. No 94 has one window and left-hand door. No 96 has 2 windows (the lower right one a door). Both have low flint wall to street with flat stone coping. Listing NGR: TQ1334803615 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| St.Georges Road | ST GEORGE'S CHURCH | ST GEORGE'S ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) St George's Church TQ 1502 NE 7/262 C 2. 1868, by George Truefitt. A broad plain building of nave, with chancel and aisle on west (ritual north) side, both with apsidal ends (on corner of Church Walk). Coursed rubble with ashlar bands and steep tiled roof. Belfry with small spire in eagle between aisle and nave. Hipped narthex with central gable porch. Mostly small, single light windows. Listing NGR: TQ1582202911 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| The Boulevard | BARN AND OUTBUILDINGS NORTH AND EAST OF FIELD PLACE | THE BOULEVARD 1. 5406 (East Side) Goring-by-Sea Barn and outbuildings north and east of Field Place TQ 1203 12/183 II GV 2. An L-shaped block, probably mainly dating from circa 1800 but much altered in modern reconstruction. The north-south range is formed of a large oblong barn, of flint. Full-height double-door opening in centre of each side (now blocked). Double tiers of 3 slits each side of doorways. A casement dormer towards south end of east side, in the pantiled roof, the slope of which becomes shallower at the bottom. Possibly modern clock turret over centre. The east-west range has been very much modernised but consists mainly of a low, hipped pantile span, having a modern loggia beneath a lean-to extension along the south side. North side of flint and hanging tiles, with several modern casement windows. All the listed buildings at Field Place form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1227303578 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| The Boulevard | FIELD PLACE | THE BOULEVARD 1. 5406 (East Side) Goring-by-Sea Field Place TQ 1203 12/84 11.10.49. II GV 2. The facade of this house was an C18 front to an earlier building. But it was refaced with cement in the late 1940s. 2 storeys. 8 windows. Portico with 4 Doric columns. One room with very good panelling dated 1624 inside. Modern addition at the rear of the house. All the listed buildings at Field Place form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1217203497 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| The Boulevard | WALL TO SOUTH OF WEST END OF THE BARN AND OUTBUILDING NORTH AND EAST OF FIELD PLACE | THE BOULEVARD 1. 5406 (East Side) Goring-by-Sea Wall to south of west end of the barn and outbuildings north and east of Field Place TQ 1203 12/182 II GV 2. C18 or earlier. Chalk, flint and brick with modern pantile coping. All the listed buildings at Field Place form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1218103505 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| The Boulevard | OUTBUILDING TO NORTH EAST OF FIELD PLACE | THE BOULEVARD 1. 5406 (East Side) Goring-by-Sea Outbuilding to north-east of Field Place TQ 1203 12/225 II GV 2. A small detached oblong building. Flint with brick quoins and dressings. Upper part of north end shows exposed timbers; upper part of south end weather-boarded. Small irregularly-placed casement windows. Half hipped tile roof. All the listed buildings at Field Place form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1218603554 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| The Steyne | K6 TELEPHONE KIOSK (WORTHING 31586) | The following kiosk shall be added to the list: WORTHING THE STEYNE TQ 1502 SW 6/271 K6 Telephone Kiosk (Worthing: 31586) GV II Telephone kiosk. Type K6. Designed 1935 by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott. Made by various contractors. Cast iron. Square kiosk with domed roof. Unperforated crowns to top panels and margin glazing to windows and door. Listing NGR: TQ1512502453 | II | 11-MAY-1989 |
| The Steyne | WAR MEMORIAL AT SOUTH END OF STEYNE GARDENS | THE STEYNE 1. 5406 War Memorial at south end of Steyne Gardens TQ 1502 SW 6/159 II 2. Polished granite. Grey plinth with sans-serif inscription to the dead of the South African War (1899-1902), with pedestal below and pink obelisk over cornice above. Listing NGR: TQ1516802457 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| The Steyne (2-7consec, 12-16consec and 17-24consec) | CHATSWORTH HOTEL | THE STEYNE 1. 5406 Nos 2 to 7 (consec.) TQ 1502 W 5/17A Nos 12 to 24 (consec.) TQ 1502 W 5/17 and the Steyne Hotel TQ 1602 8V 6/17 In the above entry: Nos 2 to 7 (consec.) Nos 12 to 24 (consec.) and the Steyne Hotel shall be amended to read: Nos 2 to 7 (consec.) Nos 12 to 16 (consec.) Nos 17 to 24 (consec.) (Chatsworth Hotel) Steyne Hotel ------------------------------------ THE STEYNE 1. 5406 Nos 2 to 7 (consec.) Nos 12 to 24 (consec.) and the Steyne Hotel TQ 1502 NW 5/17A TQ 1502 NW 5/17 TQ 1502 SW 6/17 II GV 2. (The return facade in Warwick Street is listed under that heading, Nos 34, 36 and 36A). There are no Nos 8 to 11. Circa 1807. 4 storeys and basement with area. 3 windows each. White brick. Stringcourse above ground floor. Cornice with modillions above the 3rd floor and parapet. Iron balconies on 1st floor. Some glazing bars missing, mostly on ground floor. Rectangular fanlights to doorways. The Steyne Hotel has been a good deal altered. The ground floor of the east front has been stuccoed and rusticated, and the windows have been set in surrounds. The south front facing the sea has been entirely refaced with 2 bays of 3 windows each in the mid C19. Listing NGR: TQ1510902535 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Titnore Lane | HIGHTITEN BARN | TITNORE ROAD 1. 5406 (West Side) Hightiten Barn TQ 1004 8/166 7.5.75. II 2. A symmetrical composition, probably of C18, the main barn being flanked by lower outbuildings, both of which have long return ranges, thus enclosing a yard on 3 sides. Slate roofs throughout. The main barn is oblong, of flint with brick dressings and slit openings. Double doors in centres of long sides and half-hipped roof of box-frame construction. The lower ranges are of timber, that to the right being open to the yard and both having roofs hipped at the outer ends. Listing NGR: TQ1015904262 | II | 07-MAY-1975 |
| Titnore Way | COTTAGE FARM (NOW FLINT COTTAGE) | 1. TITNORE ROAD 5406 (East Side) Cottage Farm TQ 1004 8/167 II 2. Circa 1875. 2 storeyed symmetrical cottage, of large flints with brick quoining to windows surrounds and to corners and brick band between storeys. Tiled roof with decorated bands. Gabled chimneys with decorative brick corbelling. 3 casement windows with cambered heads. Central gabled porch. Listing NGR: TQ1031504521 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Union Place | ADULT EDUCATION CENTRE (BLOCK FRONTING UNION PLACE) | UNION PLACE 1. 5406 (North Side) Adult Education Centre (Block fronting Union Place) TQ 1402 NE 3/128 II 2. Probably circa 1830. A moderately ambitious design but very badly mutilated. Stuccoed. 2 storeys. An order of Ionic pilasters supporting entablature and parapet embraces both floors; originally the order evidently extended to 4 bays, but only the 2 left-hand bays (complete) are intact. Similarly, there are 4 sash windows with glazing bars but the 2 upper right-hand ones have been replaced by one wide modern window. Extensions to left and right. Listing NGR: TQ1496202883 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Union Place (4) | CONSERVATIVE HEADQUARTERS | UNION PLACE 1. 5406 (North Side) Conservative Headquarters TQ 1502 NW 5/129 II 2. Toward mid C19. Detached 2-storey, stuccoed house with hipped slate roof over projecting eaves. Symmetrical. 3 sash windows with glazing bars, in moulded surrounds (middle upper one blind, right-hand lower one a doorway up steps, with overlight). Listing NGR: TQ1502402894 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Victoria Road | VESTRY OF ST ANDREW'S CHURCH | VICTORIA ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) TQ 1402 NW 1/100 St Andrew's Church Hall II 2. Evidently designed with the church, and with a link to it at south east corner having a 3-light window. It has a 5-light window of Perpendicular style at either end, a chequer pattern to the west and a louvred fleche above. St Andrew's Church, St Andrew's Church Hall, and St Andrew's Vicarage form a group. The above entry shall be amended to read: 1. 5406 VICTORIA ROAD (East Side) TQ 1402 W 1/100 Vestry of St Andrew's Church II GV 2. 19O8. (Link to St Andrew's Church at south east corner has a 3-light window.) It has a 5-light window of Perpendicular style at either end, a chequer pattern to the west and a louvred flech above. St Andrew's Church, the Vestry of St Andrew's Church, and St Andrew's Vicarage form a group. ------------------------------------ VICTORIA ROAD 5406 (East Side) St Andrew's Church Hall TQ 1402 NW 1/100 II GV 2. Evidently designed with the church, and with a link to it at south east corner having a 3-light window. It has a 5-light window of Perpendicular style at either end, a chequer pattern to the west and a louvred fleche above. St Andrew's Church, St Andrew's Church Hall, and St Andrew's Vicarage form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1441902993 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Victoria Road | VICARAGE OF ST ANDREW'S CHURCH | VICTORIA ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) TQ 1402 NW 1/101 Vicarage of St Andrew's Church II GV 2. Evidently designed with the church and included mainly for its group value with it. Flint with stone dressings. 2 storeys and attic. East front: 2 gables, the left larger. 2 mullioned and transomed windows (3-light above, 4-light below, the left a bay) 2 slit windows to attic. Door in overlap of rear cross wing, at left. St Andrew's Church, St Andrew's Church Hall, and St Andrew's Vicarage form a group. In the descriptive notes for the above entry, the first sentence should be amended to read: '1924. Included mainly for its group value with St Andrew's Church.' ------------------------------------ VICTORIA ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) Vicarage of St Andrew's Church TQ 1402 NW 1/101 II GV 2. Evidently designed with the church and included mainly for its group value with it. Flint with stone dressings. 2 storeys and attic. East front: 2 gables, the left larger. 2 mullioned and transomed windows (3-light above, 4-light below, the left a bay) 2 slit windows to attic. Door in overlap of rear cross wing, at left. St Andrew's Church, St Andrew's Church Hall, and St Andrew's Vicarage form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1442002981 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Victoria Road | ST ANDREW'S CHURCH | VICTORIA ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) St Andrew's Church TQ 1402 NW 1/99 TQ 1403 17/99 C GV 2. 1887-8 by Sir Arthur Blomfield. A tall, rather narrow building, of flint with stone dressings, in Early English style, having its west end set back from Clifton Road, and extending to the parallel Victoria Road. West fronts apse and flanking gabled porches below 4 lancets and roundel in gable end. East front: gable with 3 lancets. Interior: painted brick with stone dressings. Wooden roof, lean-to over aisles, lower and painted over chancel. Nave of 3 broad bays on circular columns; chancel of 2 taller arches, beyond chancel arch. Transepts, with aisles but no crossing. Low windows, in groups of 3, to aisles; short pairs of lancets in clerestorey; tall 4-light windows to transepts; pair of 3-light windows to chancel aisles. Light, highly carved choir screen and pulpit canopy. Carved wooden reredos enclosing paintings. Ironwork screen to south-east transept arch. St Andrew's Church, St Andrew's Church Hall, and St Andrew's Vicarage form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1438803007 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Warwick Place (10) | - | The following building shall be added to the list: WORTHING WARWICK PLACE TQ 1502 NW 5/146 No 10 GV II Cottage. c.1835. Stuccoed with incised lines to imitate masonry. Slate roof with brick chimneystack. 2 storeys 1 window. 12-pane sash in reveals. Left side doorcase with C20 half-glazed door and original ogee-shaped rendered porch with impost blocks, in the form of an upturned boat. C20 windows to rear. Listing NGR: TQ1529802732 | II | 08-MAY-1990 |
| Warwick Place (13 and 14) | - | WARWICK PLACE 1. 5406 (East Side) Nos 13 and 14 TQ 1502 NW 5/144 II GV 2. Probably circa 1835. 2 storey cottages. Stuccoed. Slate roof. One sash window with glazing bars each (but lower ones altered). Right-hand doors under shallow porches of ogee form. Nos 13 to 18 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1499002629 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Warwick Place (15 to 18 consec.) | - | WARWICK PLACE 1. 5406 (East Side) Nos 15 to 18 (consec.) TQ 1502 NW 5/145 II GV 2. Probably circa 1835. A range of 2-storey cottages under separate (slate) roof-span from Nos 13 and 14. Stuccoed. One sash window with glazing bars each (but lower ones of Nos 16 and 17 altered). Right-hand doors with shallow porches of ogee form. Nos 13 to 18 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1499602636 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Warwick Place (5 and 6) | - | WARWICK PLACE 1. 5406 (East Side) Nos 5 and 6 TQ 1502 NW 5/141 II GV 2. Circa 1820. 3 storeys. Stucco fronts. One sash window with glazing bars each (but No 5 has probably later bay window projecting on 1st floor). Shallow porches of ogee form at outer ends of pair. Slate roof. Nos 5 to 8 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1496602636 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Warwick Place (7) | - | WARWICK PLACE 1. 5406 (East Side) No 7 TQ 1502 NW 5/142 II GV 2. Perhaps Circa 1820. Not quite symmetrical. 3 storeys. Stuccoed. 3 sash windows with glazing bars (top mid one blind). Moulded cills (with decorated metal flower box frames) and moulded surrounds. Central porch with arch of ogee form. Slate roof. Nos 5 to 8 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1496902637 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Warwick Place (8) | - | WARWICK PLACE 1. 5406 (East Side) No 8 TQ 1502 NW 5/143 II GV 2. Possibly circa 1820. 2 storeys. Stuccoed. Slate roof. One sash window with glazing bars. Right-hand porch, of rectangular form, with posts in form of bundles of rods, winged cherubs as corbels and decorated flat hood. Nos 5 to 8 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1498202596 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Warwick Road (1 to 15 consec) | - | WARWICK ROAD 1. 5406 (East Side) Nos 1 to 15 (consec.) TQ 1502 NW 5/18 20.6.75. II GV 2. Early C19. 3 storeys and basement with area. 2 windows each. Stuccoed. Cornice and parapet. Wooden balconies with canopies on the 1st floor. (Those at Nos 7, 10 and 13 missing). Round-headed doorways in moulded frames up 3 steps with semi-circular fanlights and 6-panel moulded doors. Some glazing bars missing. Nos 1 to 15 (consec.) form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1532402577 | II | 20-JUN-1975 |
| Warwick Street (10 and 12) | THIEVES KITCHEN PUBLIC HOUSE (NOW VINTNERS PARROT) | WARWICK STREET 1. 5406 (South Side) TQ 1402 NE 3/130 Nos 10 and 12 (including TQ 1502 NW 5/130 premises of Thieves Kitchen at rear) In the above entry: Nos 10 and 12 (including premises of Thieves Kitchen at rear) shall be amended to read: Nos 10, 12, and Thieves Kitchen Public House ------------------------------------ WARWICK STREET 1. 5406 (South Side) Nos 10 and 12 (including premises of Thieves Kitchen at rear) TQ 1402 NE 3/130 TQ 1502 NW 5/130 II GV 2. Probably about 1835-40. Greek Revival. Fine fawn-coloured brickwork. Main frontage to Warwick Street. 5 sash windows. The left 3 bays 4-storey; the right bays 2-storey (slightly projecting). Modern shopfronts, also extending round both return facades. A 3-light window on the rounded right-hand corner to Marine Place (with pediment over, on 1st floor). Anthemion decorated ironwork to 3 windows in left-hand return facade to Bedford Row. All windows have glazing bars except those in Marine Place (and on corner), and all have gauged heads, the 1st floor windows also having straight bracketed hoods. Probably original cornice round ground floor. Matching cornices above top floors. Nos 10 and 12 (including Thieves Kitchen, premises at rear) form a group with Bedford Hall Bedford Row. Listing NGR: TQ1498702609 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Warwick Street (20 and 22) | BUILDING IN LIBRARY PLACE AT REAR OF NUMBERS 20 AND 22 WARWICK STREET (STOREHOUSE OF MESSRS COLIN MOORE) | WARWICK STREET 1. 5406 (South Side) Building in Library Place at rear of Nos 20 and 22 Warwick Street (storehouse of Messrs Colin Moore) TQ 1502 NW 5/33 11.10.49. II 2. The entrance to this house is in Library Place and 2 shops separate it from Warwick Street (Nos 20 and 22). But as it is used as a storehouse by Messrs Colin Moore who occupy 20 and 22 Warwick Street, it is treated as being in Warwick Street. It was originally called Stanfords Cottage but it is now only called a Store-house. The shops are of no interest. The house is early C19. 2 storeys and attic. 3 windows. Painted bricks with small cornice modillions. Mansarded roof. Stuccoed porch. The south front is of grey headers with brick dressings. There is a curved bay (stuccoed) on each side of the central window. Wooden porch with iron balcony above. 8 panel moulded door. Glazing bars intact. Later C19 addition with slate roof at north-west end. Listing NGR: TQ1505102590 | II | 11-OCT-1949 |
| Warwick Street (24 and 26) | - | WARWICK STREET 1. 5406 (South Side) Nos 24 and 26 TQ 1502 NW 5/34 II GV 2. Early C19. 3 storeys. 3 windows in all. Stuccoed. Small cornice with modillions below eaves. Slate roof. Modern shop fronts. Nos 24 to 36 (even) including No 32A, and 36A form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1506102617 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Warwick Street (28) | - | WARWICK STREET 1. 5406 (South Side) No 28 TQ 1502 NW 5/132 II GV 2. Probably early C19. At right angles to the street, facing a passage on the east. 3 storeys. Gable end to Warwick Street is stuccoed, with one sash window (with glazing bars on 2nd and 3rd floors). East side: painted brick. 3 sash windows, the right-hand one blind, the others with glazing bars, but on ground floor only one (altered) window and central doorway (with remains of doorcase). Nos 24 to 36 (even) including No 32A, and No 36A form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1506902621 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Warwick Street (30, 32 and 32A) | - | WARWICK STREET 1. 5406 (South Side) Nos 30, 32 and 32A TQ 1502 NW 5/35 II GV 2. Early C19. 3 storeys. Brick. A pair of houses set back behind deep ground-floor shop extension and having its main front turned away from the street; a symmetrical design. Single sash in centre, flanked by 3-light sash bay windows (rendered between storeys), all with glazing bars. Modillion eaves cornice. North front: 3 evenly-spaced sash windows with glazing bars. One-bay 3-storey extension to west. Tiled roof. Nos 24 to 26 (even) including No 32A, and No 36A form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1507502615 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Warwick Street (34, 36 and 36A) | - | WARWICK STREET 1. 5406 (South Side) Nos 34, 36 and 36A TQ 1502 NW 5/133 II GV 2. 1807. The return frontage of the west side of the Steyne. 4 storeys. White brick. 5 windows in all (sashes with glazing bars, the left-hand one blind and 2 windows each to Nos 34 and 36). Decorated ironwork to 1st storey windows. Modern shopfront to No 36A (which is the shop below No 1 The Steyne); Victorian shopfronts to Nos 36 and 34, with 7 pilasters of pink granite with fluted collars (2 in return front to right-hand alley; all but left 2 boxed in). Frieze with moulded panels and cornice. 1st floor window in alley has Gothic tracery. Nos 24 to 36 (even) including No 32A, and No 36A form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1509902628 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| Warwick Street (45) | - | The following building shall be added to the list: WORTHING WARWICK STREET TQ 1502 NW 5/229 No 45 - II House and shop. c1870 end of terrace building, altered c1905 by the addition of Jacobean and Georgian style features to the outside and tiled grocers shop to the interior. Stuccoed with slate roof. 3 storeys and attics. 1 window. Attic has curved pediment with scrolled sides. Parapet with end ball finials. Moulded cornice. Upper floors have giant composite pilasters 3 light canted bays with pilasters and glazing bars to the top half of the windows only. Ground floor has projecting shop front having cornice with ovolo moulding and early C20 gilt lettering with the words "LEAL & SON". 3 granite pilasters with composite type capitals with female mask, the upper part fluted. Wide round-headed shop front with elaborate keystone and decorated spandrels. Left side has decorative panel and arched doorcase with ovolo moulding keystone and scrolled spandrels. Fanlight and late C20 door. Interior has mid C19 staircase to upper floors with stick balusters (some missing) mahogany handrail and column-shaped newel posts. Reeded architraves to 1st floor door and 6 panelled door. Ground floor shop of c1905 has ceiling divided into squares by wooden divisions and RSJ with large brackets. 2 partially fluted pilasters to rear of shop and cornice with swags. Right side and rear wall have early C20 tiling predominantly tall yellow panels with blue, grey and green borders. The top has grey panels with floral tiled surround. Listing NGR: TQ1508602652 | II | 31-OCT-1988 |
| Warwick Street (5) | - | WARWICK STREET 1. 5406 (North Side) No 5 TQ 1402 NE 3/29 II 2. Early C19. 3 storeys. 1 window. Stuccoed. Cornice and parapet. Bow window of 3 lights with its own cornice and modillions. Modern shop front. Listing NGR: TQ1532602548 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| West Buildings | NOS 1 to 4 (CONSEC.) CALEDONIAN PLACE | WEST BUILDING 1. 5406 (West Side) TQ 1402 8E 4/10 Nos 1 to 4 (consec.) Caledonian Place In the above entry: WEST BUILDINGS (West Side) shall be amended to read: WEST BUILDINGS (East Side) ------------------------------------ WEST BUILDINGS 1. 5406 (West Side) Nos 1 to 4 (consec.) Caledonian Place TQ 1402 SE 4/10 II GV 2. A range at right-angles to West Buildings, with one forecourt. Early C19. 3 storeys. 3 sash windows each mostly with glazing bars. Stuccoed. Stringcourse above ground floor. Eaves cornice. Slate roof. Long and short quoins to end houses. Fluted pilasters at the ends of the inside houses. The ground floor windows of the latter are in arcading. Round-headed doorways with semi-circular fanlights and 6-panel moulded doors. No 1 and No 4 have porches with columns having capitals shaped like mushrooms. Nos 1 to 4 (consec.) Caledonian Place form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1450802381 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| West Buildings (29) | - | WEST BUILDINGS 1. 5406 (West Side) No 29 TQ 1402 SW 2/97 II 2. Early C19. Probably originally a Public House or similar premises. 2 storeys. Stuccoed. A careful symmetrical composition. 3 close-set sash windows with glazing bars (but the centre one blind). Modern shopfront below, and left-hand entrance to through-passage. Parapet, with coping, over stringcourse, recessed in centre. Panel beneath is recessed to some limits, which are also in line with the outer edges of the windows. Listing NGR: TQ1449202379 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| West Buildings (9, 11, 15 and 15A ) | - | WEST BUILDINGS 1. 5406 (West Side) Nos 9, 11, 15 and 15A TQ 1402 SW 2/9 II GV 2. Early C19. 3 storeys and basement. 2 windows. Stuccoed. Curved fronts. Cornice and parapet. Iron balconies on 1st floor (part of that at No 9 missing). Modern attics added to Nos 9 and 11. Glazing bars intact. Round-headed doorways in fluted frames with semi-circular fanlights. 6 panel moulded doors at Nos 15 and 15A. Nos 9, 11, 15 and 15A form a group. Listing NGR: TQ1449502329 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
| West Street (16 to 26 even) | - | WEST STREET 1. 5406 (East Side) Nos 16 to 26 (even) TQ 1402 SW 2/94 II GV 2. Early C19 terrace of cottages. 2 storeys and attic. Stuccoed (painted cobbles to rear). One window to each (some sashes of Victorian type, others modern). Right-hand doors of stable type. Brick modillion eaves cornice. Mansard tiled roof. Nos 14 to 26 (even) form a group, of which No 14 is local interest only. Listing NGR: TQ1441302377 | II | 21-MAY-1976 |
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