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Home > Nottinghamshire >
Nottingham
> NG5 > The Fiveways
The Fiveways
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Picture source:
Kevin Tompson |
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The Fiveways was situated
on Edwards Lane. This
grade-II listed pub closed c2014 and is now used as a community
centre. |
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Listed
building details: |
Public house with attached garden
terrace and wall. 1936-7 by A E Eberlin of Nottingham for Warwick &
Richardson, brewers of Newark, with function room added post-1945. Ashlar
limestone to ground floor with consciously roughly-cut h If -timbering to
first floor with whitened, rendered infill, and elaborate small-scale box
framing and carved barge boards to display gables. Swithland slate roof
coverings to hipped and gabled roofs with lead rolls to ridges and hips.
Ridge stack with 4 clustered ashlar chimneys; secondary stack with two
clustered chimneys at foot of hip of main roof. PLAN: l-shaped plan with
angled display gable at the junction of the 2, 2-storeyed ranges which have
single storeyed sections at their ends. Angle of original ranges filled in
by post-War function room. Neo- Tudor style. EXTERIOR FRONT (west)
ELEVATION: Symmetrical front to main 2-storeyed range with set-back single-
storey bay to left end. Smoke room doorway with moulded surround to left of
2 storeyed range. To right, a canted bay window of 1:3:1 transomed Lights,
and the entrance to the former off-sales area, now with late C20 joinery.
Further right, a 3-Light, transomed window, and then the angled corner with
wide former doorway with late C20 infill, flanked by narrow single Light
windows. Above the canted ground floor bay, a rectangular projection with
3-Light transomed window below a gable with foliage frieze at base and
pierced barge boards with foliage detail. The gable is infilled with small
panels decorated with concave-sided lozenges. This projecting bay is flanked
by single and 2-Light transomed windows. The angled corner rises to a gable
with similar detailing to that of the west elevation. Below the gable a
carved and decorated tie beam bearing the brewers' emblem 'W & R'. SIDE
(south) ELEVATION: Ground floor with wide doorway to lounge bar, flanked by
3-Light transomed windows. Further right, tall canted bay window with 1:3:1
transomed Lights. The lounge, under its own pitched roof is single-storey,
and has a tall mullioned and transomed-Light window on its gable wall. 2
half-timbered gables at rear. later extension with timber windows and plain
parapet. The doorways incorporate contemporary glass bearing the names
'Smoke Room' and 'Lounge'. INTERIOR: Smoke room to west range with high,
rectangular panelling bearing Jacobean detail to frieze. Hatch to servery
glazed at top. Neo- Tudor fireplace with Jacobean detailing to overmantel.
Fixed seating. Corridor panelled throughout and in the angle enclosing the
servery two hatches with grazed tops and sashes. In rear corridor a dumb
waiter to cellar and a mirror set above the panelling. In the centre of this
corridor an expanded space (with skylight over) and passage to the former
garden entrance. Lounge with plastered segmental ceiling; 2 plaster bands
with vine trails and grapes marking out the 3-bay division; in each bay a
plaster band decorated with foliage. Public bar with some contemporary fixed
seating. Contemporary bar back throughout servery with shelving and plain
mirrors. The later function room has 4 reused C19 cast-iron columns with
foliage and animal head detail in the capitals. Doors to the toilets and
cellar retain their original lettering. A well-composed building and
carefully detailed 1930's public house, prominently sited at an important
road junction and intended as a flagship for the brewers who built it. The
substantially complete survival of the plan and fittings in 'improved'
inter-War public houses is an increasingly rare occurrence. |
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