Grade II listed buildings

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  • Riber Castle Matlock Town, England 1868

    1868. Built by John Smedley. A large castellated mansion, the nucleus having square 3-storeyed towers at the angles, and the site enclosed by battlemented curtain-walls with out-towers.

  • Royal Academy of Music London, England

    Academy. 1910-11 by Sir Ernest George and Alfred B Yeates. Red brick with generous stone dressings, channelled stone ground floor and stone faced centrepiece; slate roofs.

  • The Wheatsheaf Inn North Waltham, England

    C18, and later. The main facade faces west and comprises a blind arcade of 5 units, each bay containing a window on the first and ground-floor. Red tile roofing, rounded at the south-west corner, moulded brick dentil eaves.

  • Mathematical Bridge Cambridge, England

    1906. Timber bridge on stone abutments. It is a copy of the original of 1749-50 designed by W Etteridge and built by James Essex. The springers date from 1749. (RCHM).

  • Church of St Michael and All Angels Alsop en le Dale, England

    Church. C12 remains but largely rebuilt in 1882-3 by F J Robinson. Coursed rubble limestone with gritstone dressings.

  • Prince Alfred Public House London, England 1856

    Public house. 1856 with later alterations including ground floor facade and interior. Brick, stuccoed.

  • Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese London, England 1667

    Dating from the 17th and 18th centuries, this historic pub off Fleet Street in London has been frequented by Dickens, Yeats, Wilde and many other famous folks.

  • The Crown Hotel Great Faringdon, England

    Early to mid C17, refronted in mid C18. Large rubble stone inn probably originally including Portwell House to east. 3-storey and attic with steep stone tiled roof and 2 renewed large chimney stacks with diagonal brick shafts on stone base.

  • Church of St John Evangelist Oxford, England

    1898-1900 by Bucknall and Comper. MATERIALS: Red brick with limestone dressings. Clay tile roof to the main body of the church. Aisle roofs probably leaded. PLAN: Nave, N and S aisles.

  • Cora Hotel London, England c. 1824-1825

    Built by Thomas Cubitt in c1824-5, the Cora Hotel was originally a terrace of 5 house-bays linked by a single story extension to a terrace in Endsleigh Gardens. Today it is a hotel known as the Hilton London Euston.

  • Number 1 Graving Dock Liverpool, England 1765

    Graving Dock. 1765, lengthened 1813, deepened by J. Hartley in 1842. Sandstone and granite.

  • Forge Cottage Plaxtol, England

    Cottage, originally a pair. C18. Coursed, dressed stone ground floor, weatherboarded on first floor.

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