THE WHITE COTTAGE.
68 Lyford Road, Wandsworth,
London.
1903
For C. T. Coggin.
Additions and alterations since Voysey's time.
White Cottage, London, photo courtesy of John Trotter
White Cottage, London, photo courtesy of John Trotter
White Cottage, London, photo courtesy of John Trotter
Photo on www.voyseyandjones.wordpress.com
Photo by Jacques Lasserre on Panoramio
Photo by Jacques Lasserre on Panoramio
Photo on
www.knigtfrank.com,
Chris Romer-Lee on twitter
White Cottage, London, photo courtesy of John Trotter
White Cottage, London, photo courtesy of John Trotter
Image on www.wsj.com
Image on www.wowhaus.co.uk
Photo on www.wsj.com
Image on www.wowhaus.co.uk
Photo on www.magdalenestate.co.uk
Image on www.wowhaus.co.uk
Image on www.wowhaus.co.uk
Image on www.wowhaus.co.uk
Image on www.wowhaus.co.uk
Image on www.wowhaus.co.uk
Image on www.wowhaus.co.uk
Image on www.wowhaus.co.uk
Photo on www.magdalenestate.co.uk
Photo on www.magdalenestate.co.uk
Image courtesy of www.knightfrank.com
Ground Floor
Plan
courtesy of www.knightfrank.com
First Floor
Plan
courtesy of www.knightfrank.com
Second Floor
Plan
courtesy of www.knightfrank.com
Link > The White Cottage on media.onthemarket.com pdf
Images reproduced courtesy of the owner of the property and Knight Frank LLP
Link > www.wowhaus.co.uk
Pevsner's London 2: South (with Bridget Cherry, 1983) says:
The most interesting is No 68 [Lyford Road], (The White Cottage), a minor work of 1903 by Voysey. Its special feature is the projecting centre rising to a third-storey belvedere. (Inside, a large central hall with staircase, original fireplace and fittings).
LYFORD ROAD SW18 1. 5033 No 68 (The White Cottage) TQ
2773 14/2 19.3.82 II 2.
1903 by C F A Voysey. A 2-storey house 3-bays wide,
rough cast with stone dressings and hipped slate roof, the quadruple casement
windows having stone mullions and leaded lights. Tne centre projects as a square
bay rising through the eaves into a third-storey belvedere. Tne
asymmetrically-placed 12-panelled door, its top 3 panels glazed, is sheltered by
a broad flat hood. On the right this is keyed into the projecting square bay and
on the left supported by a wooden truss. Above the roof the massive stacks rise
to characteristically attenuated cyma cornices. An extra full-height bay extends
on the left.
Source: British Listed Buildings
Link > Voysey Society
Reference:
> Return to Voysey Home page <
http://www.besucherzaehler-homepage.de/