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Hampshire >
Southampton > Grove Tavern
Grove Tavern
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Picture source: Google
Streetview |
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The
Grove Tavern
was situated
at 70 Swift Road. This
pub was closed and demolished in 2017. |
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From Archaelogy Data Services: |
The
building was built by Brickwoods of Portsmouth in 1938 or 1939 on the site
of an earlier beer-house, and it had undergone very little change. A full
set of architects’ drawings survive in the Southampton Archives. They are
dated 1932 but were not passed by Building Control until 1938.
The building was built in a restrained Tudor Revival style with steeply
pitched roof, shadowed windows under overhanging eaves, and a jettied front.
There was no fake timber-framing, so the overall look was more Lutyens’
‘country house’ than ‘Brewers Tudor’. Other elements came from other
architectural styles, such as the Venetian window, the classical paterae,
and the modern soldier-courses over the metal-framed windows, making the
building recognisably ‘art-deco’ in today’s terms. The front elevation
incorporated the Brickwoods rising-sun logo.
Upstairs, the landlord had a kitchen with built-in units, a living room,
four bedrooms and a bathroom and toilet. Both the pub and the living
accommodation had central heating.
Internally the fireplaces and most of the woodwork, including the three
bars, survived, but the Childrens’ Room had been converted to toilets. Of
interest in terms of the social order of the day was the absence of a ladies
toilet associated with the public bar, it was obviously a male-only space,
served by an external toilet and urinal. Women were only tolerated if they
were supervising children in the separate Childrens’ Room. |
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