Greet House Upton, England

Listed Building Data

Greet House has been designated a Grade II* listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1045931
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II*
Date Listed
8 May 2000
Name
GREET HOUSE
Location
GREET HOUSE, GREET LANE
Parish
Upton
District
Newark and Sherwood
County
Nottinghamshire
Grid Reference
SK 71204 54381
Easting
471204.0000
Northing
354381.0000

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

SK 75 SW UPTON GREET LANE (East side) 466/8/124 Greet House 19.09.1985 II*

Alternatively known as: THURGATON INCORPORATION WORKHOUSE Alternatively known as: SOUTHWELL UNION WORKHOUSE Former workhouse. 1824 and later C19 additions. Designed by William Nicholson, architect, for Rev. J T Becher. Brick with ashlar dressings and hipped slate roof. 6 ridge stacks, single roof and single side wall stacks. 3 storeys, 15 bays, cruciform plan. Windows are mostly cast iron glazing bar casements with segmental heads. Main south front has full height canted central bay with hipped roof. Pedimented central porch with rusticated front, and C20 door with fanlight. To left, single bay porch with pediment, corner pilasters and round headed doorway to west, and to its left, 2 blocked casements. To its right, 2 casements, and beyond a C20 casement and another C19 casement. Right wing has a similar porch, flanked to left by 4 C20 casements add beyond, a C19 casement. To its right, 2 casements. Above, central bay has 3 casements in recessed round headed panel, flanked by 7 casements. Above again, half round blocked opening, flanked by 8 casements. East end has central casement and above, a C20 casement. West end has corner pilasters and a blocked opening with segmental head on each floor. Adjoining later C19 addition, single storey, 3 bays, with chamfered eaves. To south, 2 casements and C20 door. To north, C20 door and to its right, 3 casements. East wing north side has 2 C20 doors and regular fenestration with 15 casements and 3 C20 casements and 3 blocked openings. West wing has to north, 2 C20 doors, regular C19 fenestration with 13 casements, 4 C20 casements, and 3 blocked openings. Central rear wing, 3 storeys, 3 bays, has to east 4 casements on each floor. North end has, above, a casement and above again, blocked opening. West side has 3 casements and C20 door to right. Above, to left, blocked opening and to right, 2 C20 and single C19 casements. Above again, 2 casements and 2 blocked openings. At west end, later C19 outbuilding with pyramidal roof. East side has central door with segmental head and overlight, flanked by single casements. Outside, main front has forecourt with 4 brick walls with shaped brick coping, partly ramped. 2 square piers with pyramidal caps. This building was built as the Thurgaton Incorporation Workhouse in 1824 at a cost of ?6,596. In 1834 it became the Southwell Union Workhouse, a detached infirmary was added in 1870 and this was extended in 1914. In 1926 a second detached infirmary was erected. This workhouse was a very influential design, based on prison designs of the C18, and much copied at Ongar (1830) and Stoke-on-Trent (1832). It is also a very well preserved example of an early workhouse with all its original plan and room layout intact.

Listing NGR: SK7120454381