There are 833 listed buildings (as of December 2023) in the district of Cambridge, England.[1] This list summarises the 87 in the west and north-west suburbs, in the area west of the Backs and broadly between Huntingdon Road, Queen's Road, Barton Road and the M11. This was the West Fields, which largely passed into the ownership of the Cambridge colleges, particularly St John's, after enclosure in 1805, and was little developed until after 1870;[2][3] the older population centres of Castle Hill and Newnham[4] are excluded from this list. The major roads are Madingley Road running east–west and Grange Road running north–south. There are 18 buildings listed at grade II*, with the remainder at grade II; there are no grade-I-listed buildings in this area.
Many of the listed buildings and structures are associated with the university, its colleges and the theological colleges. The earliest university building was the Observatory, built north of Madingley Road in 1822–24 on a green-field site, then far from the town.[5] In the 1870s, several new colleges were founded in the south of the area: Newnham College (1875), Ridley Hall (1877) and Selwyn College (1879), followed in the 1890s by theological colleges to the north: Westminster College (1896) and St Edmund's House (1896).[2] Clare College was the first to build accommodation west of Queen's Road with Memorial Court (from 1923), and the University Library moved to a new building on an adjacent site off West Road in 1931–34.[4][6] Development recommenced in the 1950s; the university built a large arts site off Sidgwick Avenue from 1954, and several new university colleges were founded within the area: Churchill College (1959), New Hall (now Murray Edwards College; 1962), Clare Hall (1966) and Robinson College (1977). Established colleges also added sites: Gonville and Caius's Harvey Court by the University Library (1960–62), and Corpus Christi's Leckhampton site west of Grange Road (1963–64).[7]
A few listed villas pre-date the Observatory, the earliest being 35 Madingley Road of around 1800.[8] Residential development in the area accelerated in the late 19th century, when substantial detached family houses set in large plots of 0.5–1.0 acres or more were built to accommodate married academics and well-off professionals, often designed by well-known London-based architects, including M. H. Baillie Scott, J. J. Stevenson and E. S. Prior.[2][9] Most of the houses are traditional in appearance, including Arts and Crafts and Queen Anne styles.[2][4] Plots were leased under restrictive terms that required the development of expensive high-quality houses, often specifying the use of red brick (rather than the local pale gault brick) with a tiled roof.[2][10] The White House, Cambridge's first house in the International Style, was built in 1930–31 in the north-west of the area on Conduit Head Road, which has a group of 1930s Modernist houses.[11] The most-recent listed building, and the only listed commercial building in this area, is the Schlumberger Gould Research Centre of 1982–84, a high-tech structure by Michael Hopkins.[12]
Listed buildings and structures
editGrade | Criteria[13] |
---|---|
Grade II* | Particularly important buildings of more than special interest |
Grade II | Buildings of special interest |
Name | Photograph | Grade | Date[a] | Location[b] | Architect | Style | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gas lamp post, Clare Road | II | c. 1889 | Clare Road TL4419957618 52°11′53″N 0°06′30″E / 52.197926°N 0.108435°E |
Cambridge University and Town Gas Light Company | Cast-iron gas lamp, still working at the date of listing (2010), with a fluted post, slightly wider at the base than the top. The lantern, a truncated square-based pyramid finished with a finial, sits on four curved rests. Below the lantern is a projecting bar, intended for supporting a ladder.[14] | ||
3 Clarkson Road | II | 1958 | Clarkson Road TL4386858809 52°12′31″N 0°06′15″E / 52.208728°N 0.104101°E |
Trevor Dannatt | Scandinavian-influenced Modern | Two-storey rectangular house on a sloping site, under a flat roof with one chimney. It is of dark-painted concrete-block construction, with the projecting first floor covered in vertically oriented cedar cladding. The windows are placed asymmetrically, with several tall narrow windows and a horizontal strip window that runs around a corner.[15][16][17][18] | |
White House | II | 1931 | Conduit Head Road–Madingley Road TL4284259307 52°12′48″N 0°05′22″E / 52.213469°N 0.089306°E |
George Checkley | International Modern style | Rectangular Cubist house, in white-rendered brick on a concrete frame; it has two or three storeys with a flat roof and a roof terrace.[19][20][21] | |
Salix (Brandon Hill/House) | II | 1934 | Conduit Head Road TL4284359361 52°12′50″N 0°05′22″E / 52.213954°N 0.089343°E |
H. C. Hughes | International Modern style | L-shaped house, in white-rendered brick on a concrete frame; it has two storeys with a flat roof and a roof terrace, and multiple prominent corner windows.[20][8][22] | |
Willow House (Thurso) | II* | 1933 | Conduit Head Road TL4286959393 52°12′51″N 0°05′23″E / 52.214235°N 0.089737°E |
George Checkley | International Modern style | White-rendered two-storey house on a concrete frame with brick infill, under a flat roof with a parapet. There is a single-storey extension. The garden face has a prominent cantilevered balcony.[23][24] | |
Spring House | II | 1967 | Conduit Head Road TL4292259520 52°12′55″N 0°05′26″E / 52.215362°N 0.090566°E |
Colin St John Wilson | L-shaped pale-brick house and artist's studio, under pantiled monopitched roofs, supported by timber columns, some of which are exposed. On the garden face, a corner is cut out for a roofed terrace, and there is a balcony.[25][26] | ||
Shawms | II* | 1938 | Conduit Head Road TL4280659562 52°12′57″N 0°05′20″E / 52.21577°N 0.088887°E |
M. J. Blanco White | Modern Movement | Two-storey timber-framed rectangular house under a flat roof with a parapet and roof-top conservatory. The house is finished with horizontally oriented weatherboard cladding.[27][28] | |
Five Gables | II | 1898 | Grange Road TL4397857557 52°11′51″N 0°06′19″E / 52.197436°N 0.105178°E |
Baillie Scott | Arts and Crafts | Red-brick two-storey house, on an asymmetrical plan, under a tiled roof with a high chimney. The upper storey is mainly roughcast rendered, except for below the chimney, and the gables are also half-timbered. Some of the windows incorporate a heart motif. It is the first of Baillie Scott's prolific works in Cambridge.[29][30] | |
Upton House | II | 1912 | Grange Road TL4390957640 52°11′54″N 0°06′15″E / 52.1982°N 0.104204°E |
Algernon Winter Rose | Neo-Georgian, with Arts and Crafts influences | Rectangular house of two storeys plus attics, now divided into three dwellings. It is predominantly in buff gault brick with red-brick and tile dressings, under a deep tiled roof with four high chimneys. The asymmetrical eight-bay front face places the main entrance left of centre, flanked by oval windows; the large and ornate doorcase has pilasters and a fanlight with a frieze above, surmounted by an arched pediment, with a small under-eaves window to the first floor. At the attic level are several small dormers, placed erratically, and a prominent red-brick belvedere-attic finished with ball finials. There is a loggia to the south east (left). The seven-bay symmetrical garden front features a full-height central canted projecting bay, finished with ball finials.[29][31][32] | |
Entrance range of Selwyn College | II | 1882 | Grange Road TL4399757950 52°12′03″N 0°06′20″E / 52.200962°N 0.105623°E |
Arthur Blomfield | Tudor Revival style | The college entrance range facing Grange Road has three storeys plus attics in red brick with stone dressings. Its central four-storey crenellated gatehouse has a single slim octagonal crenellated turret on its left, breaking the symmetry of the face. Above the arched entrance is a two-storey mullioned and transomed oriel window; the window under the battlements is decorated with tracery. The symmetrical outer wings each have gabled bays and three high chimneys.[33][34][35] | |
Master's Lodge, Selwyn College | II | 1884 | Grange Road–Sidgwick Avenue TL4406657920 52°12′02″N 0°06′24″E / 52.200674°N 0.106619°E |
Arthur Blomfield | Tudor Revival style | The master's lodge, in red brick with stone dressings, stands next to the chapel in Old Court. The style is similar to Blomfield's other buildings for the college. It has three storeys plus attics, with high chimneys. The main (west) face has projecting gabled end wings and a prominent Gothic central porch.[33][36][37] | |
North range of Selwyn College | II | 1889 | Grange Road TL4404557989 52°12′05″N 0°06′23″E / 52.2013°N 0.106341°E |
Arthur Blomfield | Tudor Revival style | The college north range in Old Court has three storeys plus attics in red brick with stone dressings, and high chimneys. The five-bay central section has a projecting gabled bay, two windows wide, flanked by two single-window projecting gabled bays. The range terminates in gabled projecting wings, two windows wide.[33][36][38] | |
Selwyn College Chapel | II | 1895 | Grange Road TL4407757945 52°12′03″N 0°06′24″E / 52.200896°N 0.10679°E |
Arthur Blomfield | Tudor Revival style/Perpendicular style | The college chapel, in red brick with stone dressings, faces the gatehouse across Old Court. The six-bay building resembles King's Chapel, with a high west front flanked with turrets, and pinnacles at the rear; the bay nearest the front (west) has no window. The interior has stained glass by Charles Kempe and F. W. Skeat.[33][36][39] | |
Selwyn College Hall | II | 1909 | Grange Road–Sidgwick Avenue TL4403457912 52°12′02″N 0°06′22″E / 52.200611°N 0.106148°E |
Grayson and Ould | 17th century/Jacobean Revival style | The college dining hall, in red brick with stone dressings, is on the south side of Old Court. The two-storey building places the hall above a half-basement, with the elevated Jacobean-style main entrance accessed via a prominent bidirectional stone staircase. The main hall section has a decorative stone openwork parapet. The interior has oak panelling with a pediment and pilasters dated 1708, from the demolished St Mary's Church, Rotterdam.[33][40][41] | |
Gate and screen, Selwyn College | II | 1932 or 1939 | Grange Road TL4406857968 52°12′04″N 0°06′24″E / 52.201105°N 0.106668°E |
T. H. Lyon | The gate to the gardens in Old Court, between the college chapel and the north range. The wrought-iron gates have an overthrow and stone-faced brick gate piers topped with vases. The wrought-iron railings surmount a low red-brick wall.[33][42][43][c] | ||
George Thomson Building, Leckhampton, Corpus Christi College | II | 1964 | Grange Road (Leckhampton Site) TL4369057995 52°12′05″N 0°06′04″E / 52.201447°N 0.101153°E |
Philip Dowson (Arup Associates) | Two linked offset blocks of graduate accommodation for Corpus Christi College, a five-storey square and a four-storey rectangle, resting on a brick platform. The blocks each have a white H-frame exoskeleton in reinforced concrete, with the building supported around 2 feet 6 inches inside; the ground floor is inset further. The individual bays have floor-to-ceiling windows and are delineated by vertical members, with shaped horizontal beams with flared ends at each storey, and a second slimmer concrete balustrade-like rail above. The blocks are connected by a staggered service section of dark-red brick.[44][45][46][47] | ||
48 Grange Road | II | c. 1880 | Grange Road TL4401558205 52°12′12″N 0°06′22″E / 52.203264°N 0.105994°E |
Probably Basil Champneys | Queen Anne style | Red-brick house of two storeys plus attics, under a tiled roof with two chimneys. The central two bays in the four-bay symmetrical south face are slightly recessed, with a central dormer and small circular windows to both main storeys. The gabled end bays have two-storey canted bay windows, with the central windows having arched tops; there are similar triple windows to both main storeys at the rear; to their right is the entrance door, topped by a prominent hood. Now accommodation for St Catherine's College.[48][49][50] | |
Elmside | II | 1885 | Grange Road–Herschel Road TL4395658303 52°12′15″N 0°06′19″E / 52.204159°N 0.105173°E |
Edward Schroeder Prior | Arts and Crafts | Rectangular red-brick house mainly of two storeys plus attics, under a complex tiled roof, incorporating a mansard roof, with five chimneys. Much of the first and attic floors features tile hanging, particularly at the rear. The garden face has a half-timbered gable and three Venetian windows occupying most of the ground floor. The entrance (east) face has a pediment-topped Venetian window. Now forms part of Clare Hall.[51][52][53] | |
Robinson College | II* | 1980 | Grange Road–Herschel Road TL4387358353 52°12′17″N 0°06′14″E / 52.20463°N 0.10398°E |
Andy MacMillan, Isi Metzstein (Gillespie, Kidd & Coia) | The concrete-framed college buildings form doubled L-shape, under pitched pantiled roofs, surrounding a central raised walkway at first-floor level. The exterior is clad in red Dorset bricks, with some decorative shaped brickwork; parts of the upper storey have tile hanging and trellises imitate the windows. The five-storey part-polygonal gatehouse is accessed by a ramp. Front Court contains the library, with a large projecting stepped triangular window divided into small square panes by a prominent black grid, and the chapel, dominated by a large stepped triangular stained-glass window by John Piper and Patrick Reyntiens, with a tall bronze-decorated door by Jacqueline Stieger. Three further courts provide student accommodation and offices.[54][55][56][57] | ||
Cambridge University Real Tennis Club | II | 1866 | Grange Road TL4403558424 52°12′19″N 0°06′23″E / 52.205226°N 0.106379°E |
William Milner Fawcett, William Cecil Marshall (extension) | Built for Clare and Trinity colleges and later attached to the university, the original real tennis club has a rectangular court and L-shaped two-storey professional's house in yellow brick under slate roofs. A two-storey clubhouse and further rectangular court were added (1890) in yellow brick with red-brick decoration; the court has six gabled bays marked by pilasters, with red-brick diaperwork.[58][59] | ||
Silbury | II | 1906 | Grange Road TL4402558616 52°12′25″N 0°06′23″E / 52.206953°N 0.106315°E |
Amian Lister Champneys | Edwardian Baroque/Neo-Georgian | Large rectangular house of two storeys plus attics, in brown-brick with red-brick dressings and a cornice, under a tiled roof with two chimneys. The symmetrical fourteen-bay front face has two prominent bowed dormers, finished with tile hanging; the central entrance has a semi-circular hood. There are two canted tile-hung dormers to the garden face, with similar ones on each end face.[17][60][61] | |
Whewell House | II | 1906 | Grange Road TL4402858650 52°12′26″N 0°06′23″E / 52.207258°N 0.106373°E |
Amian Lister Champneys | Edwardian Baroque/Neo-Georgian | Large rectangular house of two storeys plus attics, in brown-brick with red-brick dressings and a cornice, under a tiled roof with two chimneys. The symmetrical fifteen-bay front face has two roof-level arches; these sections each have two oval ground-floor windows and a tall narrow first-floor window with a semi-circular top. They flank the central entrance, which has a semi-circular hood, with a dormer above. The garden face has paired two-storey projecting bows.[17][60][62] | |
Saxmeadham | II | 1911 | Grange Road TL4399458889 52°12′34″N 0°06′22″E / 52.209414°N 0.105977°E |
Arnold Bidlake Mitchell | Neo-Georgian | Rectangular house in dark-red brick with paler red brick and stone dressings, with two storeys plus attics under a tiled roof with two chimneys. The symmetrical five-bay front face has a central entrance with an ashlar surround and canopy, with a band of rough stone outlined with red bricks above; this brick/rough stone decoration is repeated between all the ground- and first-floor windows on this face. The garden front has two canted bay windows.[60][63] | |
Clare Hall | II* | 1969, 1987 | Herschel Road TL4391158280 52°12′14″N 0°06′16″E / 52.203964°N 0.104505°E |
Ralph Erskine | The original college buildings, arranged around courtyards, fall into three areas: central facilities including the common room, reading room and dining room, four detached houses including the two-storey president's lodge, and a residential block; a similar block, also by Erskine, was added later. The site is elevated by a half-basement car park under the Herschel Road front. The red-brick buildings have red-stained timber detailing, under single-pitched timber roofs, most of which are covered with aluminium, while others have pantiles; there is also a translucent roof canopy. The president's lodge has a large bay window, with smaller ones to the other houses; some flats have cantilevered balconies. A prominent feature is the unusually wide rainwater-collection channels.[64][65][66][67] | ||
Murray Edwards College (New Hall) | II* | 1966 | Huntingdon Road TL4415559425 52°12′51″N 0°06′31″E / 52.214188°N 0.10856°E |
Peter Chamberlin (Chamberlin, Powell and Bon) | Two adjoining courtyards, in concrete and white brick. One courtyard has the rectangular barrel-vaulted library and the hall, surrounded by four circular towers and capped with an eight-segmented dome. The other larger courtyard has three-storey residential blocks.[68][69][70] | ||
Kerbstones to pool, Murray Edwards College | II* | 1966 | Huntingdon Road TL4412459442 52°12′52″N 0°06′29″E / 52.214349°N 0.108114°E |
Peter Chamberlin (Chamberlin, Powell and Bon) | The formal elevated circular concrete pool, with a fountain, is surrounded by moat with a semi-circular terminus; it is immediately adjacent to the college's hall, within the hall-and-library court.[68][71] | ||
The Grove | II | 1814 | Huntingdon Road TL4399159491 52°12′53″N 0°06′22″E / 52.214824°N 0.106189°E |
William Custance | Neoclassical | House in grey brick with stone dressings and a cornice, of two storeys plus attics under a shallow slate roof. It was extended in the late 19th century. The oldest part has a two-storey bow. The north-west face has a central projecting bay, the north-east, a central entrance with Doric columns. Now forms part of Fitzwilliam College.[72][73] | |
Westminster College Bounds | II | 1899 | Lady Margaret Road TL4435259108 52°12′41″N 0°06′41″E / 52.211288°N 0.111306°E |
probably H. T. Hare | Two-storey red-brick building with stone dressings under a tiled roof; it forms part of the theological college.[74][75] | ||
The End House | II | 1911 | Lady Margaret Road TL4417859180 52°12′43″N 0°06′32″E / 52.211981°N 0.108792°E |
Baillie Scott | Dark-red-brick house of two storeys plus attics under a tiled roof with two tall chimneys. The entrance front has three unequal gabled projecting bays; the main entrance is asymmetrically placed between the middle small and rightmost gables, with the roof reaching to ground-floor level above. To the far right is a single-storey section.[76][77] | ||
Westminster and Cheshunt College | II | 1899 | Madingley Road–Queen's Road TL4441059026 52°12′38″N 0°06′44″E / 52.210536°N 0.112119°E |
H. T. Hare | Tudor Revival style | Main building of the theological college, in red brick with stone dressings. Although Tudor Revival, there are details in 17th-century style. The front face has two shallow projecting wings, an off-centre tower capped with a turret and lantern, and four oriel windows. The chapel dates from 1921.[74][78][79] | |
Gates to Madingley Road, Westminster College | II | c. 1899 | Madingley Road–Queen's Road TL4439458988 52°12′37″N 0°06′43″E / 52.210199°N 0.111869°E |
possibly H. T. Hare | The main gates to the Madingley Road entrance to Westminster College, with associated railings and four stone piers; the other gates have brick-and-stone piers, and the red-brick wall has a stone coping. All the gate piers are finished with balls.[80] | ||
The north west range of Westminster College | II | 1899 | Madingley Road–Lady Margaret Road TL4435759078 52°12′40″N 0°06′41″E / 52.211017°N 0.111366°E |
H. T. Hare | Tudor Revival style | This building forms part of the theological college; other than a timber-framed section, it has similar architecture.[74][81] | |
The Stone House, 3 Madingley Road | II | 1896 | Madingley Road TL4414159031 52°12′38″N 0°06′29″E / 52.210652°N 0.108187°E |
Edward Doran Webb | Queen Anne style | Two-storey rectangular house in Weldon limestone under a tiled roof, with a single-storey projecting wing. Features include mullion and transom windows, and an east-face entrance with an ogee arch topped by an ornately carved balcony with a carved coat of arms above.[82][83] | |
Marshall House (Balliol Croft) | II | 1886 | Madingley Road TL4417659093 52°12′40″N 0°06′31″E / 52.2112°N 0.108726°E |
J. J. Stevenson | Queen Anne style | Tall narrow red-brick house of two storeys plus attics under a tiled roof, with a three-storey flat-roofed tower at the east end. The south face has a central balcony under a pentice roof with wooden posts and balustrade. It now forms part of Lucy Cavendish College.[84][85] | |
Elterholm, 12 and 12A Madingley Road | II | 1887 | Madingley Road TL4408659212 52°12′44″N 0°06′27″E / 52.212292°N 0.10746°E |
William Cecil Marshall, Prince and Sons, Harry Redfern | Tudor Revival style/Arts and Crafts | An L-shaped red-brick house of two storeys plus attics under a tiled roof with four chimneys. It features decorative timbering; the south face has three gables, two being jettied. A fruit store (1896), linked by an arched passage, and a detached laboratory (1911) were added; the laboratory has tile hanging.[82][86][87] | |
31 Madingley Road | II | 1932 | Madingley Road TL4367659080 52°12′40″N 0°06′05″E / 52.211213°N 0.101408°E |
Marshall Sisson | Early Modern Movement | Unrendered red-brick rectangular house with cast stone dressings; it has two or three storeys with a flat roof.[19][20][88] | |
35 Madingley Road | II | c. 1800 | Madingley Road TL4361259110 52°12′41″N 0°06′02″E / 52.211499°N 0.100484°E |
Brock brothers (studio) | Arts and Crafts (studio) | Three-storey painted brick house under a slate roof. The four-bay front face has two two-storey canted bays with decorative cornices; between them is the main entrance, flanked by pilasters and topped with a pediment. At the rear, connected by a two-storey tower, is a two-storey artists' studio, built by the Brock brothers (1908); it features tile hanging, a clay-tiled mansard roof and a large roof-light.[8][89] | |
The Observatory | II | 1824 | Madingley Road TL4324759441 52°12′52″N 0°05′43″E / 52.214568°N 0.095286°E |
John Clement Mead | Greek Revival | Two-storey building in brick faced with Bath stone ashlar, on a Devonshire granite plinth, with a slate and lead roof. The entrance (south) front has a central projecting portico with four Doric columns; the central copper-clad observatory dome is movable. The north front has two projecting wings, which housed the Observer and his assistant.[90][91][92] | |
Northumberland Dome, The Observatory | II | 1838 | Madingley Road TL4318859402 52°12′51″N 0°05′40″E / 52.214233°N 0.094407°E |
Small square white-brick single-storey building three bays wide, with the bays separated by pilasters, and a projecting entrance porch. The movable copper dome housing the telescope was renovated in 2013.[90][91][93] | |||
Schlumberger Gould Research Centre | II* | 1984 | Madingley Road–High Cross TL4233359154 52°12′44″N 0°04′54″E / 52.212226°N 0.081797°E |
Michael Hopkins | High-Tech Movement | The initial phase of a research centre for the oil company, Schlumberger. The rectangular central building houses drilling test stations and the canteen; it has an external tubular steel frame supporting the translucent white single-skinned Teflon-coated fibreglass roof membrane, which forms three polygonal bays. On either side are long narrow single-storey ranges, housing laboratories, a library and offices; these have independent external steel frames, with a flat plastic membrane roof and outer glass walls.[94][95][96] | |
Chapel of St Edmund's House | II | 1916 | Mount Pleasant TL4416859290 52°12′47″N 0°06′31″E / 52.212971°N 0.108693°E |
Benedict Williamson | Tudor Revival style | Plain red-brick Roman Catholic chapel of St Edmund's College, with stone dressings under a tiled roof. It abuts the west end of the college's south range.[97][98][99] | |
Old Hall, Newnham College | II | 1875 | Newnham Walk TL4420157778 52°11′58″N 0°06′31″E / 52.199363°N 0.108532°E |
Basil Champneys | Queen Anne style | The first building constructed for Newnham College, Old Hall originally housed lecture rooms, dining rooms and student accommodation, the latter unusually arranged off corridors rather than on staircases. The four-storey building is in red brick with white-painted woodwork, with brick detailing including quoins, shaped gables, wooden roof-level balustrade, and high grouped chimneys connected by bridges. The fenestration includes Venetian windows, windows with arched tops and dormers. The symmetrical south front was intended as the main entrance; it was later extended with a north-west wing.[100][101][102][d] | |
Former laboratory, Newnham College | II | 1878 | Newnham Walk TL4407657744 52°11′57″N 0°06′24″E / 52.199091°N 0.10669°E |
Basil Champneys | Queen Anne style | This small detached single-storey building, located in the gardens south of Clough Hall, was originally a laboratory, as university laboratory facilities at that date excluded women. It is in red brick with two gables, in a style akin to Champney's other buildings for the college.[100][103][104] | |
Sidgwick Hall, Newnham College | II* | 1880 | Newnham Walk TL4416857833 52°12′00″N 0°06′29″E / 52.199866°N 0.108073°E |
Basil Champneys | Queen Anne style | L-shaped college building, of two storeys plus attics, in red brick with white woodwork, with high clustered chimneys. The garden front is symmetrical; its central section has a cornice. The fenestration includes Venetian windows, windows with arched tops and dormers. There is a wooden roof-level balustrade.[100][105][106] | |
Clough Hall, Newnham College | II* | 1887 | Newnham College site–Sidgwick Avenue TL4407757862 52°12′01″N 0°06′24″E / 52.200151°N 0.106755°E |
Basil Champneys | Queen Anne style | Large predominantly three-storey college building, in red brick with white woodwork, on a U-shaped plan with two terminal wings. The main east–west range has a central five-bay gabled section with a Venetian-style element in the centre to Sidgwick Avenue, flanked by recessed two-bay sections. The east wing adjoins the dining hall, built at the same time; it has shaped gables and windows with gauged-brick arches. The west wing of two storeys plus attics has oriel windows, dormers with curved pediments, and shaped gables finished with finials.[100][101][107] | |
Dining hall, Newnham College | II | 1887 | Newnham Walk TL4412057858 52°12′00″N 0°06′27″E / 52.200103°N 0.107382°E |
Basil Champneys | Queen Anne style | College dining hall in red brick with white woodwork, adjoining Clough Hall and built at the same time. It has seven bays; the second in from each end projects to form two tall bow windows with domed caps. The other bays have large windows with curved heads and brick detailing including keystones above. Buttresses delineate the bays, supporting gauged-brick columns. The building's ends have shaped gables. The roof has a central wooden lantern. The interior has a gallery and a plasterwork ceiling in the style of the early 17th century.[101][108][109] | |
Pfeiffer Archway, Newnham College | II* | 1893 | Newnham Walk TL4420357802 52°11′58″N 0°06′31″E / 52.199578°N 0.108572°E |
Basil Champneys | Queen Anne style/Neo-Dutch Baroque style | The four-storey gatehouse dates from significantly later than the adjacent Old Hall, owing to problems over a right of way through the college. It is in red brick with white woodwork under a pantiled roof, with four non-identical part-octagonal turrets at the corners, finished with ogee-shaped caps; they each have three windows per storey. The archway has gauged-brick decoration including columns of three different orders. The ornate bronze/wrought-iron[e] gates and screen, part of Champneys' design, were made by Thomas Elsley. Above the archway there are three windows per storey, with arched tops. A Neo-Georgian building of 1946 by Buckland & Haywood replaces the original connecting buildings.[100][104][110][111] | |
Old Library, Newnham College | II* | 1898 | Newnham College site–Sidgwick Avenue TL4414557869 52°12′01″N 0°06′28″E / 52.200196°N 0.107752°E |
Basil Champneys | Queen Anne style | The original college library is a small single-storey red-brick building, with shaped gables and a rounded lead-roofed projection to the east end. The interior has a decorated plasterwork barrel-vault ceiling. It was extended by Champneys in 1907, giving a T-shaped plan, and several times since.[100][101][112][113] | |
Kennedy Buildings, Newnham College | II* | 1905 | Newnham College site–Sidgwick Avenue TL4401757873 52°12′01″N 0°06′21″E / 52.200265°N 0.105882°E |
Basil Champneys | Queen Anne style | Fellows' accommodation at the north-west of the site, by Peile Hall. In red brick with brick quoins, it has two storeys plus attics under a mansard roof with high chimneys and dormer windows. The front to Sidgwick Avenue has a seven-bay arcade with stone dressings, a central entrance and three flanking fanlights, circular and square windows in brick panels above, surmounted by a balustrade.[100][101][114] | |
Peile Hall, Newnham College | II* | 1910 | Newnham College site–Grange Road TL4399357818 52°11′59″N 0°06′20″E / 52.199777°N 0.105508°E |
Basil Champneys | Queen Anne style | The large red-brick college building has three storeys plus attics and white-painted woodwork. A long seven-bay central section runs north–south along the west (Grange Road) side of the site, and wings at each end outline a courtyard to the street. The north–south range has a central projecting pedimented section, three windows wide, to the garden front, with a mansard roof and dormer windows. The rear wings each have shaped gables and windows with gauged-brick arches.[100][101][115] | |
Katharine Stephen Rare Books Library, Newnham College | II | 1982 | Newnham College site–Sidgwick Avenue TL4418457880 52°12′01″N 0°06′30″E / 52.200284°N 0.108327°E |
Joanna van Heyningen, Birkin Haward, Jr | Postmodern | A small detached two-storey library building, housing rare books; the design was inspired by Basil Champneys' original college library. The rectangular building has horizontal stripes of red and blue brick on a steel frame, under a lead-covered barrel-vaulted roof. There are two small steel windows to each of the end faces and a long narrow skylight on the crest of the roof.[116][117][118] | |
Entrance to Trinity College Fellows' Garden | II | Mid 18th century (gates), 20th century | Queen's Road TL4433358613 52°12′25″N 0°06′39″E / 52.206846°N 0.110817°E |
Pedestrian gate in wrought iron with an overthrow, originally from Rectory Manor House, Enfield, which also provided the gate for the University Library entrance on Burrell's Walk; the stone gate piers date from the 20th century.[119][120] | |||
Clare College screen and gates, Queen's Road | II | c. 1930 | Queen's Road TL4436458420 52°12′18″N 0°06′40″E / 52.205104°N 0.111189°E |
Probably Giles Gilbert Scott | Screen with three paired gates, in wrought iron; the gate piers are of buff brick, topped with stone, and surmounted by carved finials.[121] | ||
Newnham Cottage | II | c. 1805 | Queen's Road TL4442058094 52°12′08″N 0°06′43″E / 52.202145°N 0.111869°E |
William Wilkins, Sr | Late Georgian | Two-storey villa in grey brick under a slate roof, with later extensions to the north side. The south (garden) front has a central inset section with three French windows, surmounted by a mid-19th-century rounded verandah of cast-iron and glass; the outer bays also each have a French window, and there are four windows to the first floor. The roof overhangs the inset section, with no interruption to the cornice.[29][122] | |
Finella | II* | 1830s | Queen's Road TL4442258025 52°12′05″N 0°06′43″E / 52.201525°N 0.111869°E |
Raymond McGrath (interior) | Late Georgian | Painted brick two-storey villa, now divided into flats, under a slate roof with broadly projecting eaves and three chimneys. The house is approximately square with a service wing to the north; the main entrance is on the east side. The garden (south) front has three canted bay windows with four windows above. The interior was decorated in 1928–29 by Raymond McGrath, using metal leaf, metal panels and glass, in an early example of the Modernist style.[20][29][123][124][125] | |
Memorial Court, Clare College | II* | 1924, 1934 | Queen's Road TL4430158417 52°12′18″N 0°06′37″E / 52.205093°N 0.110266°E |
Giles Gilbert Scott | Neo-Georgian | Grey-brick court with stone dressings, under pantiled roofs. The main court is rectangular with the corners truncated and the west side open; two slightly later projecting wings extend to the west, towards the University Library. The symmetrical three-storey entrance (east) face has a huge open central arch with inset screens and fluted columns, flanking a large stone entrance. This central bay is flanked by sections of nine windows on each side, with L-shaped two-storey continuations at each end, whose terminal bays are marked with fluted columns. The remainder of the building has two storeys.[123][126][127][128] | |
Falling Warrior, Clare College Memorial Court | II | 1957 | Queen's Road (Clare Memorial Court) TL4428158401 52°12′18″N 0°06′36″E / 52.204955°N 0.109967°E |
Henry Moore | The recumbent bronze sculpture depicts a dying male figure, at slightly smaller than life size (under 5 feet long), with a circular shield, atop a bronze plinth. It was placed here in 1961.[129][130] | ||
Gateway to the University Library from Clare College | II | c. 1930 | Queen's Road (Clare Memorial Court) – University Library site TL4421358413 52°12′18″N 0°06′32″E / 52.205081°N 0.108977°E |
Probably Giles Gilbert Scott | Wrought-iron gates, with gate piers in buff brick, whose stone tops are surmounted by vases.[131] | ||
Entrance range of Ridley Hall | II | 1882 | Ridley Hall Road TL4439557846 52°12′00″N 0°06′41″E / 52.199923°N 0.111398°E |
Charles L. Luck | Tudor Revival style | The three-storey entrance (east) range of the theological college, in red brick with Ancaster stone dressings and mullion and transom windows, under a tiled roof. The central gatehouse has crenellations. On each side is a four-window section terminating in a gabled bay: a single large gable with an oriel window at the north end, and two slightly projecting gabled bays, originally forming the principal's lodge, at the south.[132][133][134] | |
Ridley Hall gateway | II | 1882 | Ridley Hall Road TL4441157846 52°12′00″N 0°06′42″E / 52.199919°N 0.111632°E |
Charles L. Luck | Tudor Revival style | A pair of cast-iron gates between gate piers in red brick with Ancaster stone dressings. The piers are surmounted by large stone tops with an ogee profile.[132][135] | |
Ridley Hall Chapel | II | 1892 | Ridley Hall Road TL4436357880 52°12′01″N 0°06′39″E / 52.200237°N 0.110944°E |
William Wallace | Tudor Revival style | The chapel of the theological college, in red brick with Ancaster stone dressings, with crenellations and a tiled roof. There are five bays, one of which was added in 1914, with buttresses. The windows feature stone tracery. The interior has stained glass by R. J. Newbery, later altered by Joan Howson, and a reredos by Albert Richardson.[132][133][136] | |
North range of Ridley Hall | II | 1892 | Ridley Hall Road TL4433657875 52°12′01″N 0°06′38″E / 52.2002°N 0.110548°E |
William Wallace | Tudor Revival style | Three-storey accommodation block for the theological college, similar to Wallace's later west range; it has been altered. The building is in red brick with Ancaster stone dressings and mullion and transom windows, under a tiled roof with high chimneys and crenellations. The front facing the court has six bays, some of which are gabled; the two central bays are flanked by two with slight projections.[132][133][137][f] | |
West range of Ridley Hall | II | 1912 | Ridley Hall Road TL4431057844 52°12′00″N 0°06′37″E / 52.199928°N 0.110154°E |
William Wallace | Tudor Revival style | Three-storey accommodation block for the theological college, similar to Wallace's earlier north range. The building is in red brick with Ancaster stone dressings and mullion and transom windows, under a tiled roof with high chimneys. The front facing the court has five bays, with the two outermost being gabled, and the middle three having crenellations; all three middle bays project, with the centre one projecting the furthest.[132][133][138] | |
Raised Faculty Building, Sidgwick Site | II | 1961 | Sidgwick Site, Sidgwick Avenue TL4426657986 52°12′04″N 0°06′34″E / 52.201215°N 0.109571°E |
Casson, Conder & Partners | The C-shaped two-storey university faculty building, part of the original design for the Sidgwick Site, forms three sides of a rectangular court completed on the west by the Faculty of Economics, with libraries in the long arms. Except for the entrance, the entire concrete-framed flat-roofed building is elevated above ground level by paired concrete pillars, forming a cloister. Faced in white Portland stone, it has irregularly placed and sized windows, some of which span storeys, with a narrow window band beneath the cornice in some parts. The concrete base is shaped with round-cornered holes and a wavy edge.[139][140][141] | ||
Faculty of Economics, Sidgwick Site | II | 1961 | Sidgwick Site, Sidgwick Avenue TL4419057971 52°12′04″N 0°06′30″E / 52.2011°N 0.108454°E |
Casson, Conder & Partners | The five-storey university faculty building, part of the original design for the Sidgwick Site, forms the west side of a court completed by the Raised Faculty Building and also projects southwards. The long narrow rectangular block has a concrete frame, faced in brick, with irregularly placed windows including steel-framed bay windows. There are open sections in the ground floor forming passageways, and the upper floor is recessed.[139][140][142] | ||
Lady Mitchell Hall, Sidgwick Site | II | 1964 | Sidgwick Site, Sidgwick Avenue TL4422957930 52°12′03″N 0°06′32″E / 52.200722°N 0.109006°E |
Casson, Conder & Partners | The larger of two university lecture theatres, which form part of the original design for the Sidgwick Site. The brick building has an irregular octagonal plan under a complex aluminium-covered roof, with two large visible box beams. A rectangular glass entrance foyer projects at the north end, and there are large windows to the sides.[139][140][143] | ||
Little Lecture Hall and Lecture Hall Block, Sidgwick Site | II | 1960, 1964 | Sidgwick Site, Sidgwick Avenue TL4428357948 52°12′03″N 0°06′35″E / 52.200869°N 0.109804°E |
Casson, Conder & Partners | The smaller of two university lecture theatres and associated block of lecture rooms, which form part of the original design for the Sidgwick Site. The polygonal brick Little Hall has a truncated pyramidal metal roof with a skylight. The tall rectangular Lecture Hall Block is of concrete faced in brick and has irregularly placed windows.[139][140][144] | ||
History Faculty, Sidgwick Site | II* | 1968 | Sidgwick Site, Sidgwick Avenue TL4419658046 52°12′06″N 0°06′31″E / 52.201772°N 0.108573°E |
James Stirling | The L-shaped university faculty building has a glass roof over the reading room of the Seeley Historical Library, filling the space between the arms. The six-storey building over a basement has a concrete frame; it has a stepped profile, wider at the base than the top. The long faces of the L are occupied with windows and the ends are clad in red brick. The glass library roof, supported by a steel framework, forms a section of a pyramid, rising in steps. On the north side are the main entrances on two levels, and two adjacent towers for lift and stairs (originally clad in red tiles, since replaced by brick), with glass bridges joining to the main L shape.[145][146][147][148] | ||
29 Storey's Way | II | 1922 | Storey's Way TL4361359571 52°12′56″N 0°06′02″E / 52.215641°N 0.100694°E |
Baillie Scott | Neo-Georgian | Square brick house, partly white painted, with a small service wing. It has two storeys, with a mansard roof and tall chimneys on each corner. The entrance has pilasters and a curved canopy, surrounded by oval windows.[8][149] | |
30 Storey's Way (Gryt-Howe) |
II | 1914 | Storey's Way TL4355059609 52°12′58″N 0°05′59″E / 52.215999°N 0.099789°E |
Baillie Scott | Arts and Crafts | Small rectangular white-rendered brick house with a tiled roof and one large and one small chimney; it has a single storey with attics. The main garden front has an off-central tile-hung gable.[8][150] | |
48 Storey's Way | II* | 1913 | Storey's Way TL4357259503 52°12′54″N 0°06′00″E / 52.215041°N 0.100066°E |
Baillie Scott | Arts and Crafts | Rendered brick rectangular house of two storeys plus attic under a steeply pitched tiled roof, with two tall chimneys. On the front face, the roof reaches the ground-floor storey on one side, and there are two unequal gabled bays on the other.[8][52][151] | |
54 Storey's Way (Lennel) | II | 1922 | Storey's Way TL4364359497 52°12′54″N 0°06′04″E / 52.214968°N 0.101102°E |
Baillie Scott | Neo-Georgian | Rectangular two-storey brick house with a pantiled roof, a cornice and two chimneys. On the front face, the central part projects and the entrance is surmounted by a swan-neck pediment.[8][152] | |
56 Storey's Way (Squerryes) | II | 1923 | Storey's Way TL4366259488 52°12′54″N 0°06′05″E / 52.214882°N 0.101376°E |
Baillie Scott | Picturesque style | Brick house with two projecting wings and a central two-storey porch, under a tiled roof. There are dormers at both the first floor and the attic levels.[8][153] | |
63 Storey's Way | II | 1912 | Storey's Way TL4392159333 52°12′48″N 0°06′18″E / 52.213422°N 0.105098°E |
T. D. Atkinson | Neo-Georgian | Large yellow-brick house with two storeys plus attic, under a pantiled roof with a cornice and two chimneys. On the front face, the central bay projects slightly and the entrance is surmounted by a large curved pediment, with a canted window above.[82][154] | |
76 Storey's Way | II | 1913 | Storey's Way TL4388059344 52°12′49″N 0°06′16″E / 52.213532°N 0.104503°E |
Arthur Hamilton Moberly | Neo-Georgian | Large yellow-brick rectangular house with two storeys plus attic under a deep tiled roof with dormer windows and two chimneys. The front face has eight bays; the central four are slightly recessed and highlighted by silver-brick pilasters, and there are also silver-brick quoins.[82][155] | |
Central buildings, Churchill College | II | 1968 | Storey's Way TL4378659274 52°12′47″N 0°06′11″E / 52.212927°N 0.103099°E |
Richard Sheppard (Sheppard, Robson & Partners) | Brutalist | The main communal and administrative buildings of the college, in brown brick and concrete on an H-shaped plan. Two massive brick edifices frame the college's main entrance, with an aluminium gate by Geoffrey Clarke. The first-floor dining hall (the bar of the "H") has vertically slatted concrete windows and a tripled barrel-vaulted concrete roof, with the buttery, bar and common rooms on the ground floor. The boiler house has paired tall concrete chimneys.[156][157][158] | |
Wolfson Hall, Bracken Library and Bevin Rooms, Churchill College | II | 1968 | Storey's Way TL4374259225 52°12′45″N 0°06′09″E / 52.212499°N 0.102434°E |
Richard Sheppard (Sheppard, Robson & Partners) | Brutalist | Two-storey college library and hall in brown brick and concrete. The east face has a semicircular staircase and a long window with closely arranged vertical concrete slats. The library was extended (1973) in similar style to provide an archive to house Winston Churchill's papers. The main entrance is in bronze by Geoffrey Clarke.[156][157][159] | |
East court, Churchill College | II | 1968 | Storey's Way TL4380959189 52°12′44″N 0°06′12″E / 52.212158°N 0.103399°E |
Richard Sheppard (Sheppard, Robson & Partners) | Brutalist | Three linked courts of two/three-storey student accommodation under a flat copper-clad roof, south of the college's central buildings. The brown brick is interrupted with horizontal concrete bands marking storeys and at the top. The wide bay windows are spaced unevenly so that each student room has one.[156][157][160] | |
South and west courts, Churchill College | II | 1968 | Storey's Way TL4369759177 52°12′43″N 0°06′06″E / 52.212079°N 0.101756°E |
Richard Sheppard (Sheppard, Robson & Partners) | Brutalist | Four linked courts of two/three-storey student accommodation under a flat copper-clad roof, south-west of the college's central buildings. The brown brick is interrupted with horizontal concrete bands marking storeys and at the top. The wide bay windows are spaced unevenly so that each student room has one.[156][157][161] | |
North court, Churchill College | II | 1968 | Storey's Way TL4371259334 52°12′49″N 0°06′07″E / 52.213486°N 0.102042°E |
Richard Sheppard (Sheppard, Robson & Partners) | Brutalist | Three linked courts of two/three-storey student accommodation under a flat copper-clad roof, west of the college's central buildings. The brown brick is interrupted with horizontal concrete bands marking storeys and at the top. The wide bay windows are spaced unevenly so that each student room has one.[156][157][162] | |
Sheppard Flats (Research Flats), Churchill College | II | 1961 | Storey's Way TL4342659444 52°12′52″N 0°05′52″E / 52.214549°N 0.097905°E |
Richard Sheppard (Sheppard, Robson & Partners) | Brutalist | Two-storey brown-brick accommodation with flat roofs for married researchers; the repeating units interlock to form a swastika. The ground-floor flats have individual exterior areas whose partition walls are continuous with the accommodation walls. Access to the first-floor flats is via external staircases. The flats were the earliest part of Churchill College to be completed.[156][157][163] | |
Chapel, Churchill College | II | 1967 | Storey's Way TL4336459402 52°12′51″N 0°05′49″E / 52.214187°N 0.096981°E |
Richard Sheppard (Sheppard, Robson & Partners) | Brutalist | Square chapel under a flat copper roof with four copper skylights, with sloping heads. The plain brown-brick walls each have two narrow vertical windows with stained glass by John Piper and Patrick Reyntiens. Eight concrete beams are slotted above the windows, intersecting to trace a cross.[156][157][164] | |
Entrance gateway to the University Library onto Burrell's Walk | II | After 1722 (gates), 1935 | University Library site–Burrell's Walk TL4419458481 52°12′21″N 0°06′31″E / 52.205696°N 0.108729°E |
Probably Giles Gilbert Scott (gateway) | Wrought-iron gate forming the pedestrian gateway to the University Library on the north side. Originally from Rectory Manor House, Enfield, the overthrow bears the arms of J. G. Nightingale (another gate from there is at Trinity Fellows' Garden). The gate is set in low buff-brick walls with a stone coping, surmounted by wrought-iron railings. At the ends of the wall are paired brick piers, finished with balls.[119][165] | ||
University Library | II | 1934 | University Library site TL4416158411 52°12′18″N 0°06′30″E / 52.205076°N 0.108216°E |
Giles Gilbert Scott | Elongated symmetrical building in mid-brown brick with stone dressings including a cornice, under a pantiled roof. There is a prominent central tower of twelve storeys with a pyramidal roof, under which is a projecting bay with a huge arched entrance with a rusticated surround and four small windows above, surmounted by a pediment; the entrance has a bronze screen and doorway by H. H. Martin. This central bay is flanked by slightly recessed sections, and outer wings with twelve tall vertical windows, which are repeated on the tower, with the outermost windows being arched, with stone balustrades. Paired two-storey wings project to the rear.[123][166][167][168] | ||
Harvey Court, Gonville and Caius College | II* | 1962 | West Road TL4432658137 52°12′09″N 0°06′38″E / 52.202556°N 0.110513°E |
Leslie Martin, Colin St John Wilson, Patrick Hodgkinson | Three-storey buff-brick terraces providing student accommodation in stepped tiers under flat bronze-covered roofs; each tier's roof provides a terrace for the higher level. The top storey is supported on piers. The terraces form a courtyard enclosing an elevated square platform, with three sides facing inwards and the south one outwards; this (south) face is broken by a broad staircase leading to the garden. The south end of the east face has the entrance, under a concrete canopy. Beneath the central platform is a breakfast room, illuminated by a large square skylight in the courtyard.[169][170][171][172] | ||
9 Wilberforce Road | II | 1937 | Wilberforce Road TL4358858783 52°12′31″N 0°06′00″E / 52.208568°N 0.099995°E |
Dora Cosens | Modern Movement | Two-storey almost-square house in rendered or whitewashed brick, under a flat roof with a roof terrace and prominent canopy. The garden front has a symmetrically placed first-floor balcony.[173][174][175] | |
Emmanuel College Sports Pavilion | II | 1910 | Wilberforce Road TL4352258697 52°12′28″N 0°05′56″E / 52.207812°N 0.098993°E |
Reginald Francis Wheatly, Edward Ford Duncanson | Picturesque style with Neo-classical features | Emmanuel College's sports pavilion and associated groundsman's house and former stables, in rendered brick, with an asymmetrical plan under steeply pitched tiled roofs. The pavilion is topped with a copper cupola whose base is decorated with chevrons; it has a loggia with Tuscan columns to the front and two main wings, the east of which also has a loggia. To the rear, the two-storey L-shaped groundsman's house is linked by a single-storey section, with a tall chimney.[176] |
Notes and references
edit- ^ Dates in Bradley & Pevsner are preferred where there is a conflict.
- ^ The precise location is given first as a grid reference, based on the British national grid reference system (or OSGB36) of the Ordnance Survey, and second as World Geodetic System 84 coordinates, used by the Global Positioning System. Data derive from the grid references at Historic England's National Heritage List for England.
- ^ The listing states the architect was Blomfield and the date 1882–89, but this is contradicted in Bradley & Pevsner (which gives 1932) and Selwyn College's website (which gives 1939).
- ^ Four storeys according to Bradley & Pevsner; the listing notes two storeys plus attics.
- ^ The listing states the gate screen is wrought iron; according to Bradley & Pevsner the gates are bronze.
- ^ At the time of the listing, two of the non-projecting bays had gables, but the Images of England photograph of 2003 shows four gables.
- ^ Search at Historic England (7 December 2023)
- ^ a b c d e Philomena Guillebaud (2015). West Cambridge: 1870–1914: building the bicycle suburb. Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society XCVI: 193–210
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, p. 34; Rawle, pp. 32, 219
- ^ a b c Philomena Guillebaud (2015). West Cambridge: the two World Wars and the inter-war lull. Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society XCVII: 179–93
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, p. 27; Rawle, p. 201
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, p. 36
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 39–43
- ^ a b c d e f g h Bradley & Pevsner, p. 342
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, p. 34; Rawle, pp. 33, 219
- ^ Rawle, pp. 33, 219
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 35, 342; Rawle, p. 62
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, p. 49
- ^ Listed Buildings, Historic England (accessed 30 December 2023)
- ^ Gas lamp post outside number 5, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 29 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 45, 340, plate 117
- ^ McKean, p. 19
- ^ a b c Rawle, p. 221
- ^ 3, Clarkson Road, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 7 December 2023)
- ^ a b Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 35, 342
- ^ a b c d Rawle, p. 62
- ^ White House, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 1 December 2023)
- ^ Salix, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 1 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 35, 342, plate 112
- ^ Willow House, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 1 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 343, plate 122
- ^ Spring House, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 1 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 35, 343
- ^ Shawms, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 2 December 2023)
- ^ a b c d Bradley & Pevsner, p. 337
- ^ Five Gables, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 29 December 2023)
- ^ Rawle, p. 218
- ^ Upton House, entrance gates and gate piers, garden structures and garage, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 29 December 2023)
- ^ a b c d e f Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 208–11
- ^ Rawle, pp. 148–49, 174–75
- ^ Selwyn College Entrance Block, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 23 December 2023)
- ^ a b c Rawle, pp. 148–49
- ^ Selwyn College Master's Lodge, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 23 December 2023)
- ^ Selwyn College, North Range, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 23 December 2023)
- ^ Selwyn College Chapel, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 23 December 2023)
- ^ Rawle, pp. 60–61, 148–49
- ^ Selwyn College Hall, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 24 December 2023)
- ^ Selwyn College, Gateway and screen between the North Range and the Chapel, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 23 December 2023)
- ^ Selwyn History, Selwyn College, Cambridge (accessed 23 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, p. 338
- ^ Rawle, pp. 108, 139
- ^ McKean, p. 22
- ^ Corpus Christi College, George Thomson Building, Leckhampton House, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 24 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, p. 338
- ^ Rawle, p. 60
- ^ 48, Grange Road, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 15 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevnser, p. 78
- ^ a b Rawle, pp. 60–61
- ^ Elmside including boundary wall and gate, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 9 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 184–86
- ^ Rawle, pp. 84–85, 163–65
- ^ McKean, p. 40
- ^ Robinson College, Cambridge, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 10 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, p. 339
- ^ Cambridge University Real Tennis Club and Professionals House, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 8 December 2023)
- ^ a b c Bradley & Pevsner, p. 340
- ^ Silbury including gate piers and plinth wall, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 8 December 2023)
- ^ Whewell House, including boundary walls to south and west, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 7 December 2023)
- ^ Saxmeadham, including flanking walls, front boundary wall and gate piers, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 7 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 77–78, plate 121
- ^ Rawle, pp. 160–61
- ^ McKean, p. 31
- ^ Clare Hall, University of Cambridge, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 15 December 2023)
- ^ a b Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 154–56
- ^ Rawle, pp. 65, 83, 154–55
- ^ Murray Edwards College (formerly New Hall), National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 3 December 2023)
- ^ Kerbstones to pool in courtyard to west of hall, New Hall , National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 4 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 28, 97–98
- ^ The Grove, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 4 December 2023)
- ^ a b c Bradley & Pevsner, p. 242
- ^ Westminster College Bounds, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 3 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, p. 321
- ^ End House South and End House North, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 3 December 2023)
- ^ Rawle, pp. 60–61, 156–67
- ^ Westminster and Cheshunt College, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 2 December 2023)
- ^ The main and secondary gateway to Madingley Road and the boundary wall, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 2 December 2023)
- ^ The north west range of Westminster College, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 3 December 2023)
- ^ a b c d Bradley & Pevsner, p. 341
- ^ The Stone House and associated gate piers, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 2 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, p. 146
- ^ Marshall House, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 3 December 2023)
- ^ Rawle, pp. 34–35
- ^ Elterholm, 12 and 12A Madingley Road, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 2 December 2023)
- ^ 31, Madingley Road, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 1 December 2023)
- ^ House and Brock brothers' studio, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 5 December 2023)
- ^ a b Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 276–77
- ^ a b Rawle, p. 201
- ^ The Observatory, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 6 December 2023)
- ^ Northumberland Dome at the Observatory, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 6 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 280, plate 124
- ^ Rawle, pp. 66–67
- ^ Schlumberger Gould Research Centre and attached perimeter wall to the north, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 6 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, p. 191
- ^ Rawle, p. 153
- ^ Chapel of St. Edmund's House (Roman Catholic), National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 3 December 2023)
- ^ a b c d e f g h Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 157–61
- ^ a b c d e f Rawle, pp. 60, 144–45
- ^ Newnham College, Old Hall, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 25 December 2023)
- ^ Newnham College, House in the College grounds circa 100 yards South of Clough Building, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 28 December 2023)
- ^ a b The Champneys Buildings, Newnham College (accessed 28 December 2023)
- ^ Rawle, pp. 34–35, 60, 144–45
- ^ Newnham College, Sidgwick Hall, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 28 December 2023)
- ^ Newnham College, Clough Hall, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 28 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 157–59, plate 104
- ^ Newnham College, Hall, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 28 December 2023)
- ^ Rawle, pp. 60, 144–45, 174–75
- ^ Newnham College, Pfeiffer Building, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 28 December 2023)
- ^ Newnham College, Old Library, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 28 December 2023)
- ^ History of the library, Newnham College (accessed 28 December 2023)
- ^ Newnham College, Kennedy Buildings, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 26 December 2023)
- ^ Newnham College, Peile Hall, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 25 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 158, 161
- ^ Rawle, pp. 144–45
- ^ Katharine Stephen Rare Books Library, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 29 December 2023)
- ^ a b Bradley & Pevsner, p. 269
- ^ Trinity College: Entrance gates to the Fellows' Garden, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 14 December 2023)
- ^ Clare College: Screen and gates fronting Queen's Road, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 16 December 2023)
- ^ Newnham Cottage, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 20 December 2023)
- ^ a b c McKean, p. 13
- ^ Powers, pp. 183–84
- ^ Finella, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 20 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 76–77
- ^ Rawle, pp. 100–1
- ^ Clare College Memorial Court, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 16 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, p. 77
- ^ Falling Warrior sculpture in Clare College Memorial Court, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 16 December 2023)
- ^ Clare College, gateway to the University Library, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 15 December 2023)
- ^ a b c d e Bradley & Pevsner, p. 241
- ^ a b c d Rawle, pp. 166–67
- ^ Ridley Hall Entrance Block, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 24 December 2023)
- ^ Ridley Hall Gateway onto Ridley Hall Road, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 24 December 2023)
- ^ Ridley Hall Chapel, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 24 December 2023)
- ^ Ridley Hall North Block, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 25 December 2023)
- ^ Ridley Hall West Block, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 24 December 2023)
- ^ a b c d Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 269–72
- ^ a b c d Rawle, p. 198
- ^ Raised Faculty Block, Cambridge University, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 21 December 2023)
- ^ Faculty of Economics and Politics, Cambridge University, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 21 December 2023)
- ^ Lady Mitchell Hall, Cambridge University, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 22 December 2023)
- ^ Little Hall and attached Lecture Theatre block, Cambridge University, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 22 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 269–70, 272–73
- ^ Rawle, p. 199
- ^ McKean, p. 27
- ^ History Faculty Building, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 22 December 2023)
- ^ 29 Storey's Way, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 1 December 2023)
- ^ 30 Storey's Way, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 1 December 2023)
- ^ 48 Storey's Way, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 1 December 2023)
- ^ 54 Storey's Way, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 1 December 2023)
- ^ 56 Storey's Way, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 1 December 2023)
- ^ 63 Storey's Way, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 1 December 2023)
- ^ 76 Storey's Way, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 1 December 2023)
- ^ a b c d e f g Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 66–70
- ^ a b c d e f g Rawle, pp. 64, 82–83, 156–57
- ^ Central buildings Churchill College, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 5 December 2023)
- ^ Wolfson Hall, Bracken Library and Bevin Rooms Churchill College, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 5 December 2023)
- ^ 3 linked residential courts due south of central buildings Churchill College, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 5 December 2023)
- ^ 4 linked residential courts due south west of central buildings Churchill College, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 5 December 2023)
- ^ 3 linked residential courts due west of central buildings Churchill College, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 5 December 2023)
- ^ Chapel, Churchill College, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 4 December 2023)
- ^ Research flats, Churchill College, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 4 December 2023)
- ^ Entrance gateway to the University Library onto Burrell's Walk, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 14 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 268–69
- ^ Rawle, pp. 200–1
- ^ University Library, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 15 December 2023)
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, pp. 336–37
- ^ Rawle, pp. 80–81, 104–5
- ^ McKean, p. 21
- ^ Harvey Court, Gonville and Caius College, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 20 December 2023)
- ^ Powers, pp. 94–95
- ^ Bradley & Pevsner, p. 341
- ^ 9, Wilberforce Road, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 6 December 2023)
- ^ Emmanuel College Sports Pavilion, including Groundsman's House and stable, National Heritage List for England, Historic England (accessed 7 December 2023)
Sources
- Simon Bradley, Nikolaus Pevsner. Cambridgeshire (The Buildings of England series) (Yale University Press; 2014) ISBN 978-0-300-20596-1
- Charles McKean. Architectural Guide to Cambridge and East Anglia Since 1920 (Era Publications Board/RIBA Publications; 1982) ISBN 0-907598-013
- Alan Powers. Modern: The Modern Movement in Britain (Merrell; 2005) ISBN 9781858942551
- Tim Rawle. Cambridge Architecture (2nd edn) (André Deutsch; 1993) ISBN 0-233-98818-1