Lincolnshire Motor Company Showrooms Lincoln, England

Listed Building Data

Lincolnshire Motor Company Showrooms 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shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.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
1392689
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II
Date Listed
9 August 2000
Name
LINCOLNSHIRE MOTOR COMPANY SHOWROOMS
Location
LINCOLNSHIRE MOTOR COMPANY SHOWROOMS, BRAYFORD WHARF NORTHLINCOLNSHIRE MOTOR COMPANY SHOWROOMS, LUCY TOWER STREET
District
Lincoln
County
Lincolnshire
Grid Reference
SK 97224 71236
Easting
497224.0000
Northing
371236.0000

Listed Building Description

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

SK 97 SE LINCOLN LUCY TOWER STREET/BRAYFORD WHARF NORTH

2/10014 Lincolnshire Motor Company Showrooms 9.8.2000 GV II

Lincolnshire Motors, Brayside Pool, Lincoln. Side Street is Lucy Tower Street. Former motor showrooms and garage. Designed 1958, built 1959 by Sam Scorer of Denis Clarke Hall, Scorer and Bright; engineer Dr K Hajnal Konyi. Reinforced concrete construction to main former garage, with steel frame and concrete floors to circular corner block and curtain wall elevation to block facing Lucy Tower Street which has flat roof. Rear former garage, now book store, has a reinforced concrete hyperbolic paraboloid shell roof, supported on columns to provide a clear unobstructed area. It consists of four units, each 50 ft square and 2« inches thick, with the edges thickened to form the supporting framework. The lower points of each shell are supported on reinforced concrete columns, the high point at each corner being stayed against wind by means of a steel column.

Plan of three main parts. Garage at rear now a book store and little altered. Former show room facing Lucy Tower Street, with circular front showroom and office, is now a branch library.

Included as a good example of an elegant hyperbolic paraboloid shell concrete building, its structure little altered. An exceptionally imaginative car showrooms, it has converted well to its present use.

Sources Architectural Review, January 1959, pp.57-8 Architectural Review, May 1960, pp.349-50 Information from Sam Scorer