Railway Station Saltburn, Marske and New Marske, England

Listed Building Data

Railway Station 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shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.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
1387572
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II
Date Listed
11 June 1973
Name
RAILWAY STATION
Location
RAILWAY STATION, STATION SQUARE
Parish
Saltburn, Marske and New Marske
District
Redcar and Cleveland
Grid Reference
NZ 66407 21406
Easting
466407.0000
Northing
521406.0000

Listed Building Description

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

SALTBURN, MARSKE AND NEW MARSKE

NZ6621SW STATION SQUARE, Saltburn 802-1/10/57 (West side) 11/06/73 Railway Station (Formerly Listed as: SALTBURN AND MARSKE BY THE SEA STATION SQUARE, Saltburn By The Sea Railway Station)

GV II

Railway station, now shops, restaurant and railway station. 1861, probably by west Peachey for the Stockton and Darlington Railway. MATERIALS: cream brick with ashlar dressings and cast-iron windows; Welsh slate roof with brick and ashlar chimneys. STYLE: Classical. EXTERIOR: single storey, 19-bay range, arranged 2:2:3:1:3:1:3:2:2, the central 5 higher and projecting and with a 3-bay portico, the outer groups of 7 with central 2-bay projections. Central block has ashlar plinths and capitals to shallow Tuscan pilasters with entasis which define portico and flanking bays. Portico has jewelled keys to round arches with ashlar architraves resting on recessed pilasters. Similar style heads to windows of flanking bays and to openings behind portico side doors and central window with cabled shafts, Lombardic tracery; doors have curved brackets to archivolts and radiating glazing bars to semi-circular overlights. Deep entablature rests on pilasters and has blocking course, behind which is a low-pitched hipped roof. Flanking wings, each with central 2 bays breaking forward under hipped roof, have renewed doors and windows with pilasters, the right wing with scroll brackets and entablature to segmental headed ashlar surround to door in second bay from end. Polychrome brick heads on ashlar impost string to windows and to plain door to left of centre block; heads round in link blocks and raised and segmental in projections; bracketed eaves cornice; roof with ridge at eaves height of central block. Roof has yellow terracotta ridge tiles and tall chimneys at side eaves of central hipped roof and on ridge of wings. Extruded lower corner lavatory block between centre and wing at right has 2 segmental-headed windows, door in right return and ashlar entablature.

INTERIOR: not inspected. (Industrial Archaeology Review: Spring 1980: Harrison JK and Harrison A: 139).

Listing NGR: NZ6640721406