Little Deans Yard (College of Wminster School) London, England
Listed Building Data
Little Deans Yard (College of Wminster School) has been designated a Grade I 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shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.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
- 1066372
- Listing Type
- listed building
- Grade
- I
- Date Listed
- 9 January 1970
- Name
- LITTLE DEANS YARD (COLLEGE OF WESTMINSTER SCHOOL)
- Location
- LITTLE DEANS YARD (COLLEGE OF WESTMINSTER SCHOOL), 4, BROAD SANCTUARY SW1
- District
- City of Westminster
- County
- Greater London Authority
- Grid Reference
- TQ 30068 79348
- Easting
- 530068.4400
- Northing
- 179347.9810
Listed Building Description
Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.
TO 3079 SW CITY OF WESTMINSTER BROAD SANCTUARY, SW1 101/19 (ABBEY PRECINCT AND WESTMINSTER SCHOOL) 9.1.70 Little Dean's Yard: No 4 ('College' of Westminster School)
G.V. I
School dormitory. 1722-30 by Lord Burlington, badly damaged in World War II, restored 1947. Stone, coppered roof. Severe astylar design with restrained use of Palladian motifs. Long range with main front facing east on to Abbey Garden. Originally 2 storeys (floor inserted to upper storey 1906) with ground floor open as a "piazza". 15 bays long and 3 bays deep. Entrance and stair bay built out in brick with stone dressings and quoins to north end of range. Semicircular arched doorway flanked by stone pilasters carrying archivolts; panelled doors with wrought iron fanlight grill. Main east front arcaded ground floor "piazza" with square piers, enclosed and provided with windows in 1846. The upper part, the dormitory, lit high up by square architraved windows with piano nobile level having, originally, blind niches with alternating segmental and triangular pediments, cut open as windows by T.G. Jackson in 1895 (intermediate floor inserted 1906). Pseudo parapet below niches. Entablature with modillion cornice and pulvinated frieze. "College" was Burlington's first public building and marks the opening victory of his campaign against empirical classicism of the Wren school.
R.C.H.M. Westminster School; L.E. Tanner. Earls of Creation; James Lees Milne.
Listing NGR: TQ3007179367