ANNESLEY LODGE.
8 Platts Lane, London.
1895
1913 alterations and additions.
The house has been devided into flats.
For Reverend
Charles Voysey
(C. F. A.
Voysey's father).
Reverend
Charles Voysey
Image taken from an old postcard
Link >
Illustrierte kunstgewerbliche Zeitschrift,
vol.9,
1898, p.180
Link >
Photo RIBA
Annesley Lodge, photo courtesy of John Trotter
Photo on paradisebackyard.blogspot.de
Photo by Jacques Lasserre on Panoramio
Photo by Rita Graham on flickr
Photo by Steve Cadman on Flickr
Annesley Lodge, London, photo courtesy of John Trotter
Photo by Jamie Barras on Flickr
Photo by Jamie Barras on Flickr
Photo by Steve Cadman on Flickr
Photo by Jacques Lasserre on Panoramio
Annesley Lodge, photo courtesy of John Trotter
Annesley Lodge, photo courtesy of John Trotter
Photo by Steve Cadman on Flickr
Photo by Jacques Lasserre on Panoramio
Photo RIBA
Source: "G.", "The Revival of English
Domestic Architecture VI. The Work of Mr. C. F. A. Voysey."
The Studio 11 (1897), pp.16-25.
Link >
RIBA Drawings Collection
Annesley Lodge, image on picuki.com
Link >
RIBA Drawings Collection
South-west elevation,
published in: Stuart Durant, C F A Voysey, London 1992, p. 42.
and
published in The British Architect, 28th February 1896.
RIBA Drawings Collection
North-west elevation,
published in Stuart Durant, C F A Voysey, London 1992, p. 43,
and
published in The British Architect, 28th February 1896.
RIBA Drawings Collection
Text from The British Architect, 28th February 1896, p.148.
Ground floor plan
Link >
RIBA Drawings Collection
First floor plan,
Link >
RIBA Drawings Collection
Annesley Lodge, Ground Floor Plan
Annesley Lodge, First Floor Plan
The Hall, photo published in Studio,
1901
RIBA Photographs Collection
Photographs and Drawings Courtesy of The Royal Institute
of British Architects.
Photographs, drawings, perspectives and other design
patterns
at the Royal Institut of British Architects Drawings and
Photographs Collection.
Images can be purchased.
The RIBA can supply you with conventional photographic or
digital copies
of any of the images featured in RIBApix.
Link > Photo RIBA: Annesley Lodge (1)
Link > Photo RIBA: Annesley Lodge (2)
Link > Photo RIBA: Annesley Lodge (3)
Link > RIBA: Perspective Annesley Lodge (4)
Link > RIBA Drawings Collection: all Voysey Images
Pevsner's London 4: North (with Bridget Cherry, 1998) says:
[Hampstead 2B: the Redington Road area]. In Platt's Lane the most interesting house is No 8, ANNESLEY LODGE, the best Voysey house in London, built for his father in 1895. L-shaped plan with front door in the inner angle. Typical Voysey sloping buttresses and roughcast, with stone dressings to a remarkable long band of low first-floor windows just below the eaves. The mullions have no mouldings at all, and the whole house is astonishingly ahead of its date. The main entrance is in the angle of the two wings, leading to a large corner entrance hall. The interior has been subdivided.
Source: Pevsner Architectural Guides at Yale University Press.
Link > www.voyseysociety.org
Description on Historic England:
CAMDEN
TQ2585NW PLATTS LANE 798-1/24/1318 (East side) 14/05/74 No.8 Annesley
Lodge
GV II*
Detached house, converted to flats 1983. 1895-6. By CFA Voysey for
his father, the Rev Charles Voysey. Roughcast with stone dressings. Tiled hipped
roofs with projecting swept eaves and tall roughcast chimney-stacks. L-shaped
plan along the rear of a corner plot. Battered walls with sloping buttresses to
returns. 2 storeys. Each range with bands of 5 and 4 window casements flanking
central 4-window band to canted angle bay. Central angle entrance with prostyle
portico flanked by 2 slit windows; boarded door having ironwork heart motif
furniture. Stone windows with mullions and leaded panes; to right of entrance
forming a 5-window projecting bay; 1st floor with continuous stone sill band.
Return to Kidderpore Avenue with bands of 6-window casements to 1st and slightly
recessed ground floor.
References:
Wendy Hitchmough, CFA VOYSEY, London 1995 pp. 73-75.
The British Architect, XLV, 1896.
The Studio, XI, 1897, p. 18; XXI, 1901, p. 245.
> Return to Voysey Home page <
www.besucherzaehler-homepage.de/