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SE12 > Baring Hall Hotel
Baring Hall Hotel
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Picture source:
Stephen Harris |
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The Baring Hall Hotel was situated at 368 Baring
Road. Built in 1882 as part of Lord Northbrook’s artistic suburb vision for
Grove Park. The pub was designed by Ernest Newton (past RIBA war-time
president). Newton’s beautifully crafted building as part of the artistic
suburb vision was inspired by Bedford Park (promoted as the ‘healthiest
place in the world’).
This pub
closed
c2009. |
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This pub has now reopened. |
Graham Collom (April 2014) |
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The pub and its associated stable block
was grade-II listed by Historic
England in 2018. Having been run by pub company Antic, the pub did not
re-open after the lifting of the first Covid-19 lockdown, officially closing
in December 2020. |
Movement80 (August 2021) |
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The Baring Hall Hotel in Grove Park closed in
2009 following a fire and was, for a time, included on Historic Britain’s
Heritage at Risk register. It dates from 1882 and is seen as an important
example of the ‘improved public house’. In 2011, following the refusal of an
application to demolish it, concerned locals set up the Baring Trust and
successfully secured Grade II listing as well as Asset of Community Value
(ACV) registration. Their efforts have been rewarded. The pub has been
purchased by well known and respected pub operator Garry Mallen. Mr Mallen
commented, “It’s clear that the Baring Hall Hotel has always had enormous
potential as a pub. It is going to be quite a challenge getting the building
up and running and we will have to do it in phases as it’s a large project.
But I am looking forward to the day that we can welcome our first customers
through the doors. |
London Drinker magazine, October/November 2023 |
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Listed
building details: |
Public house and stabling block designed by Ernest Newton, 1881-1882, with
later additions.
Description
Public house and stabling block, 1881-1882, built to the designs of Ernest
Newton, with some remodelling later in the C19 and C20.
Materials: red brick with applied render, cast-iron railings and plain tile
roof.
Plan: central servery with four separate bar areas all with openings to
allow circulation. Connected to the west side of the L-Shaped original
building is a single-storey block (probably originally a billiard room,
added by 1897), this has a toilet block (added 1925) built against its west
end with a connecting lobby area. Kitchens and storage areas occupy most of
the northern side of the building on the ground floor. Domestic
accommodation and hotel rooms are arranged over the two upper floors. A
stabling block and yard is set to the rear (north side), accessed via Baring
Road and a car parking area is set to the west, on Downham Way.
Exterior: restrained but varied composition bearing the influence of Norman
Shaw’s domestic work of the 1870s, as was characteristic of Newton’s
earliest designs. The design is composed of two storeys with an attic level
set under a hipped roof with gabled dormers, tall ridge stacks and a moulded
eaves cornice. The principal frontage is to the east, fronting onto Baring
Road. This has a shallow first-floor terrace with an ornate cast-iron
balustrade above the arched entrance doorway and the three windows to its
left. This appears in the original drawings to have been a projecting
balcony, but was either under-built as part of an early secondary phase
(this being shown in photographs of around 1895) or was a modification made
during the original construction process. To the right of the entrance is a
projecting gable bay, rendered between the windows, which rises through to
the attic level. Both street-facing elevations are rendered with channelled
rustication beneath sill level, principally with windows with round-headed
lights at street level, multi-paned sashes set under cambered brick heads to
the first floor and casements to the gabled dormers above. The side (north)
elevation has a narrow, single-storey extension, which was subsequently
added to the side (north) elevation, which has now (2018) been partially
removed.
To the Downham Way elevation, there is a side entrance with an
open-pedimented doorcase set on brackets, this apparently created along with
the flanking windows in the 1890s. Two further arched windows and a dormer
at attic level feature above. Further west along Downham Way is a rendered
brick single-storey annexe, added by 1897. This continues the rendered
channelled rustication beneath the windows. Five windows are positioned to
the east side, the one closest to the main range (the easternmost opening)
being wider and distinguished by its arched head; this presumably originally
serving as a separate entrance to this section. The west end of the range
incorporates a part-rendered brick toilet block of 1925 and a further
subsequent addition of a matching form, this with high-level windows and a
blocked doorway to the street.
A gabled, red-brick stabling block belonging to the original phase is set to
the rear of the pub (north-west side), accessed via a gated passage on the
north side of the building from Baring Road. This is currently in a poor
state with some brickwork failing and the roof structure partially collapsed
(only externally inspected).
Interior: at ground-floor level the three bar rooms of the original portion
of the building are arranged around the central servery. This arrangement
appears to have been introduced in the 1890s as a modification to Newton’s
original plan as part of the enlargement of the building and some of the
fittings date from this secondary phase, although the arrangement was
subsequently revised after 1925 to elongate the bar counter along Downham
Way and shorten that along Baring Road (reusing the 1890s fittings). Notable
remaining elements of the 1890s work include the tapered bar counter which
has tongue-and-groove panels set between thin fluted pilasters, the bar back
shelving with some remaining inset mirror panels and carved brackets, and
tongue-and-groove dado panelling and a portion of an iron-framed and glazed
screen to the southern Downham Way room. C19 floorboards are retained in all
bar rooms. The full-height fielded panelling in the northern bar room
fronting onto Baring Road is of a later C20 date. Throughout the ground
floor a series of openings have been introduced between the bar rooms to
allow internal circulation. Separated from the public rooms are a storeroom
and office area (set behind the servery) and a kitchen, which is positioned
behind the single-storey hall (north side), neither of which were inspected.
To the west, extending along Downham Way is what was probably originally a
billiards room, added by 1897, the hall now serving as a dining and function
area. This has an original slatted-timber ceiling with a central, hipped
roof light and sections of tongue-and-groove, dado-level panelling to the
north and east walls. An opening on the north side has been made which gives
access to the kitchens, via a hatch and service doors. Part of the west side
of the hall has been screened off with a part-glazed partition giving access
to a private staff area (not inspected). A toilet block (added 1925) is
accessed via a plain hallway to the west.
The ground-floor bar rooms on the south side of the building and the servery
retain the scorch marks and smoke blackening of the fire damage caused in
2009. The ceiling in the bar room has been patched and the glazed partition
at the western end of the former billiard room, which divides it from the
staff area, has also been replaced . The upper rooms were not inspected
internally.
History
The Baring Hall Hotel was built to the designs of Ernest Newton (1856-1922)
as part of a planned new ‘artistic suburb’ laid out in the southern part of
the parish of Lee. The locality, initially referred to as Burnt Ash
(apparently derived from a single farm present by the early C18), was by the
1870s being promoted as a new high-status suburb under the genteel name,
Grove Park. Spurred by the South Eastern Railway’s new line across the area
laid in the 1860s and the opening of Grove Park station in 1871, development
of the new middle-class suburb began to emerge around crossing of the
Bromley Road (now Baring Road) and the railway. The hotel was the principal
social establishment at Grove Park, with a varied collection of substantial
villas built in the fashionable Queen Anne style (several of which were also
designed by Newton) developed to the east of the railway.
The promotion of Grove Park as a discreet middle-class residential
development was mainly the initiative of the Liberal statesman Thomas Baring
(made Earl of Northbrook in 1876, the year he returned from serving as
Viceroy to India) and local developer John Pound. The Baring family were the
principal landowners at Grove Park having acquired the Manor of Lee in 1792,
whilst Pound had been involved with speculative development on Burnt Ash
Hill (to the north of Grove Park) from the 1850s. In 1869 Pound was lodging
applications for three new roads on the west side of Burnt Ash Lane and, by
1871, was engaged in building large villas on Baring Road. The firm of Henry
Newton (father of Ernest Newton) was also involved at Grove Park at this
stage, probably serving as the estate surveyors. Early houses were large,
individually-designed villas, most with substantial gardens and private
carriage drives. Newton received commissions for several houses, including
‘Three Gables’, built 1883 for Edith Nesbit, author of the Railway Children.
Three Gables was one of at least four buildings of Newton’s at Grove Park
which were published in the Building News between 1879 and 1883.
The Baring Hall Hotel was planned as part of the earliest phase of Grove
Park’s development, the first application made in 1875, with a provisional
license eventually granted in 1879. However, development was delayed until
the early 1880s as Lord Northbrook disapproved of Pound's early plans,
leading to a revised proposal for a 'large hotel with livery stables',
according to the Kentish Mercury (4th October 1879); this presumably being
Newton's subsequent design of 1881. This opened in 1882 as the Baring Hall
Hotel, although it was also referred to as the Grove Park Hotel and the Inn
at Grove Park. The published plans for the hotel produced by Newton
(Building News, 1882) show a ground-floor arrangement with four distinct
public rooms and a kitchen with five hotel bedrooms set above on the first
floor. In addition to the usual public house provisions, it also had a
'spacious coffee room' in which regular 'smoking concerts' were held in the
late 1880s, as was reported in the South London Press in January 1889.
Offering spacious rooms for non-alcoholic refreshments, respectable
entertainment and serving meals were novel developments for a public house
of this period. In addition, the restrained architectural approach presented
a clear contrast to the contemporary trends in pub architecture for
extravagant design schemes. These notable diversions from the standard
public house form of the period and the intention to appeal to ‘respectable’
middle-class custom have led to the Baring Hall Hotel, along with a small
number of other pioneering examples, to be credited as early precursors to
the influential ‘improved pub movement’, which took hold and transformed pub
design and management after 1918.
As an ‘artistic suburb’ Grove Park consciously followed the model of the
widely-publicised development at Bedford Park, Turnham Green. Along with its
suburban west London counterpart, Grove Park was influenced by the aesthetic
movement and the fashion for Queen Anne style designs and sought to appeal
to middle-class Londoners of discerning taste. The influence of Bedford Park
is most evident in the Baring Hall Hotel and the adjacent group of shops to
the south side of Downham Way, also designed by Newton, which stylistically
and formally reflect Richard Norman Shaw’s Tabard Inn (1880) and its
adjacent gable-fronted shops (all listed Grade II*; National Heritage List
for England 1079594). Several other aesthetic suburban estates were built in
the following decade but Grove Park was, as Mark Girouard has noted, ‘the
prettiest and most accomplished of the estates built under the influence of
Bedford Park in the 1880s’ (Sweetness and Light, 1977). Despite its early,
fashionable status, Grove Park declined in prestige in the late C19 and
early C20. As the suburb grew, large plots were subdivided and the original
substantial villas were all lost to redevelopment.
The work at Grove Park was important in establishing Newton’s architectural
reputation. In the immediate years that followed, he along with several
contemporaries who had worked under Norman Shaw founded the St George’s Arts
Society, which in 1884 became the Art Workers’ Guild; influential proponents
of the Arts & Crafts movement. His work designing privately-commissioned
houses in the emerging suburbs to the south of London led to high-profile
country home commissions across England. Over the course of his career his
work spanned the Queen Anne style, designs in the Arts and Crafts tradition
and later, into the C20, several significant neo-Georgian buildings.
Newton’s position as a leading architect of the period was recognised
through his appointment as a Royal Academician in 1919 and being awarded the
Royal Gold Medal in 1918 by the Royal Institute of British Architects, where
he served as president from 1914 until 1919.
The Baring Hall Hotel has been subject to some changes since the 1880s.
Newton’s published plans (Building News, 1882) show a ground-floor
arrangement with four distinct public rooms arranged around a central
entrance hall. The accompanying illustration shows the ‘inn’ set within a
garden with a private drive. This also shows one central entrance occupying
the Baring Road elevation, with only a single window at ground-floor level
on the side (south) elevation; the accuracy of this aspect of the drawing is
corroborated by a photograph looking north along Baring Road, probably taken
in the 1890s. By 1897, the Ordnance Survey map shows that a rear block
(probably originally functioning as a billiard room) had been added and it
would appear that the interior was remodelled at this time (the remaining
fixtures including the counter, bar back shelving, dado panelling and a
portion of a cast-iron, glazed screen are all consistent with a late C19
date). The 1890s arrangement followed the basic room division of Newton’s
published plans, although the servery was moved to a central position and
the entrance hall converted to extend the bar room to the south. At a later
stage (after 1925, on the basis of plans of this date) the distinct rooms
were opened-out to allow internal circulation and some of the 1890s bar
fittings were repositioned to extend the entire length of the bar room
fronting onto Downham Way (with the Baring Road bar counter correspondingly
shortened). The 1925 work added a toilet block to the west side of the
billiards room and a narrow, single-storey extension was subsequently added
to the north elevation on the Baring Road side. In 2009, the interior was
damaged by a fire, the scorch marks and smoke blackening having been
preserved as a feature of the reopened pub. In 2017, a small portion of the
mid-C20 side extension (north) was removed (pending further planned work). |
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