Switchback Tunnel at Downton Castle Burrington, England

Listed Building Data

Switchback Tunnel at Downton Castle 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shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.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
1392843
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II
Date Listed
3 September 2008
Name
SWITCHBACK TUNNEL AT DOWNTON CASTLE
Location
SWITCHBACK TUNNEL AT DOWNTON CASTLE
Parish
Burrington
District
County of Herefordshire
Grid Reference
SO 44008 74038
Easting
344007.8955
Northing
274038.1680

Listed Building Description

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

DOWNTON

1421/0/0 Switchback Tunnel at Downton Castle 03-SEP-08 (Formerly listed as: DOWNTON CASTLE TUNNEL)

GV II A rustic style switch-back tunnel dating from the mid-1780s, built by Richard Payne Knight (1751-1824) as a feature in his Picturesque landscape at Downton Castle(qv) in order to offer the visitor an unexpected view of it. The tunnel is constructed in stone rubble with some stone dressings remaining, and spans a path on the steep southern cliff side of Downton Gorge. It has a V-shaped plan, with slightly irregular entrance arches, with integral steps at its south-west end leading up the cliff path.

HISTORY: Richard Payne Knight (1751-1824) was an art collector and writer, most famous for his influential role within the Picturesque Movement, and for his didactic poem The Landscape. The tunnel was introduced as a feature along one of a series of walks within the Picturesque landscape he created in the dramatic Downton Gorge (then known as Downton Vale), which carries the River Teme situated to the south-west of the Castle. The landscape included several other features, some now no longer, or only partly extant, including rustic bridges over the River Teme, and a Cold Bath (qv). The tunnel is designed to lead the visitor from one view of the landscape to another. These dramatic views are recorded on a series of paintings by Thomas Hearne, commissioned by Richard Payne Knight in the mid-1780s, when his landscape was near completion.

SOURCES: The entry for Downton Castle as included on the Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in England. S Daniels and C Watkins, The Picturesque Landscape (1994), pp 49-60. Richard Payne Knight, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004-7) Historic Ordnance Survey series.

REASONS FOR DESIGNATION: The tunnel in Downton Gorge at Downton Castle is designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons:

  • It is a good example of a late-C18 garden feature in the rustic Picturesque style. Its design, a switch-back tunnel with a V-shaped plan, guides the visitor up a steep cliff path, and offers unexpected views of Downton Gorge which are recorded in a series of paintings of the mid-1780s by Thomas Hearne. It has a strong historic association with Richard Payne Knight (1751-1824), most famous for his influential role within the Picturesque Movement. It forms an important feature within the registered grade II landscape at Downton as created by Richard Payne Knight at Downton in the 1780s. * It makes an important contribution to the understanding of the historic development of the designed landscape at Downton and to the understanding of the Picturesque landscape movement in general.