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Kent > Strood >
Royal Oak
Royal Oak
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The Royal Oak was situated at 53
Cooling Road. This grade-II listed pub
closed in 2015 and is
now in residential use. |
Source: Matthew Missien |
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Listed
building details: |
Public house. Originally a house of probable later C17
date. Refaced in brick and extended to the rear in late C18 or early C19.
Multiple single-storey C20 extensions to the north, south and east and
interior remodelling.
Materials: brick laid in Flemish bond and whitewashed. Partial survival of
earlier timber frame. Probably late C18 or early C19 tile roof with
weatherboarded gables at attic level.
Plan: rectangular lobby entrance plan of two storeys plus attic and cellar
with a central stack. Later single-storey additions on three sides.
Exterior: the main (west) elevation onto Cooling Road is symmetrical, of
three bays with a central entrance with an oculus window above on the first
floor. The oculus has lost its original glazing bars (shown on a photograph
of the pub in c 1900). The two flanking first floor windows are
eight-over-eight timber sashes (northern probably early C19, southern a C20
replacement) in segmental arched openings with timber sills. The
fenestration on the ground floor is modern in original openings. The
entrance, with a modern door, has been enlarged by the addition of an
adjoining modern window. The fenestration of the early C20 southern
extension has also been altered with large modern windows replacing the two
entrances flanking a single window shown in a photograph of c 1930. A fascia
panel and cornice extends along the entire frontage of the pub. The tiled,
steeply-pitched, half-hipped roof has a catslide extension to the rear. It
has overhanging eaves with an eaves cornice and C20 cast-iron guttering
supported on struts. The weatherboarded gables at attic level have
double-casement windows. The large central stack has been rebuilt above roof
level. The hipped roof of the C19 single-storey southern extension has a
replacement covering of modern fibre cement tiles. To the rear, the building
has been extended piecemeal with a series of flat-roofed ranges.
Interior: the ground floor interior consists of a bar either side of the
entrance which has a shallow lobby. The bar areas have been knocked through
into the extensions at the north and south. The bars have a single servery
which passes behind the central stack. The bar-counters, bar-back, fixed
seating and other joinery are modern. A number of the principal timber beams
and posts survive. Studding to the rear of the bar may be original,
indicating the original rear wall. The beams have deep chamfers and
bar-stops. The back-to-back chimney breasts survive but the fireplaces have
been blocked.
To the rear of the principal bars is a large function room, along with
kitchens and WCs, mainly within the late C20 extension but at the west end
within the part of the building covered by the catslide roof. Access to the
first floor is via a straight stair with matchboard panelling at the west
end of the function room.
The first floor originally had two rooms. The southern room has been
partitioned. The northern room has a narrow gallery to the rear beneath the
slope of the catslide roof lined with matchboard panelling. On the east side
of the stack is a small closet accessed by a plank and batten door with iron
strap hinges and a spring latch with drop handle. The closet is lined with
square panelling, presumably reused from elsewhere in the building. A
corresponding cupboard in the northern room also has a panelled interior and
door. The rooms have chamfered beams (boxed-in in the northern room) with
plain stops. Fireplaces are blocked and there is a blocked window in the
north wall of the northern room. At the front of the building, lit by the
oculus window, is a small stair lobby with a modern newel stair to the attic
floor. This has two rooms with modern fittings. The roof structure, from the
small area inspected, appears to be of late C18 or early C19 date but with
later strengthening.
The cellar was not inspected.
Pursuant to s.1 (5A) of the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation
Areas) Act 1990 ('the Act') it is declared that the single-storey extensions
surrounding the two-storey core of the building to the north, south and east
(with the exception of the area under the catslide roof), and all modern bar
fittings on the ground floor, are not of special architectural or historic
interest. |
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