Crypt Chambers

Crypt Chambers

Coordinates: 53°11′26″N 2°53′25″W / 53.19046°N 2.89031°W / 53.19046; -2.89031

Crypt Chambers
Crypt Chambers
Crypt Chambers
Location: 28–34 Eastgate Street and 34–40 Eastgate Row, Chester, Cheshire, England
OS grid reference: SJ 406 663
Built: 1858
Built for: William and Charles Brown
Architect: T. M. Penson
Architectural style(s): Gothic Revival
Listed Building – Grade I
Official name: No.28 Street and No.34 Row (Crypt Building)
Designated: 28 July 1955
Crypt Chambers is located in Cheshire
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Location in Cheshire

Crypt Chambers (or Crypt Building) is at 28–34 Eastgate Street and 34–40 Eastgate Row, Chester, Cheshire, England. It has bee designated by English Heritage as a Grade I listed building and incorporates a section of the Chester Rows.[1]

Contents

History

Crypt Chambers is built on the site of a medieval house whose undercroft is still present.[2] The present building was constructed in 1858 to a design by T. M. Penson. It was built as a department store for William and Charles Brown of the Browns of Chester family of drapers.[1]

Two columns with a railing between, under which is a stairway leading from the street to a lower level
Entrance to the undercroft

Architecture

Exterior

The building is in four storeys plus attics. It is constructed in red and yellow sandstone with a roof of brown tiles. The façade is asymmetrical, having a square stair turret, with three bays to the east and one wider bay to the west. At the street level five steps at the base of the tower lead down to the undercroft and in the middle east bay eight steps lead up to the Row level. Between these are shop fronts. At the Row level are cast iron railings behind which are stallboards and above them are moulded arches. On the front of the tower at this level is a blank scroll, on the east face is a recessed panel containing the initials W. B. (for William Brown), on the west face the initials are C. B. (for Charles Brown) and on the rear face is a scroll inscribed AD 1858: CRYPT CHAMBERS. On each side of the entrance to the shop are the Chester City arms. In each of the third and fourth storeys of the east bays are three pairs of arched, two-light windows with slender columns between each pair. In the west bay are four two-light arched windows in each storey. At this level on the tower is a two-storey oriel window. Above these storeys, the central eastern bay has a gable containing a traceried window in a rounded triangle, on each side of which are three-light dormer windows. The west bay also has a gable; this contains a small triangular oriel. The tower has a four-light window between shallow buttresses. The top of the tower consists of a truncated spire with a gabled dormer on each face. At its summit is a cast iron rail.[1]

Interior

The undercroft consists of four bays with chamfered rib-vaulting; the masonry is "of high quality".[1] The architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner considered its undercroft to be "one of the best medieval crypts of Chester".[3] Much of the structure above the undercroft has been changed or covered by modern materials.[1]

Present day

Crypt Chambers still contains a department store, Debenhams, which maintains its traditional name of Browns of Chester.[4] The undercroft is used as a restaurant.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Number 34 Row Crypt Building 34, Chester", The National Heritage List for England (English Heritage), 2011, http://list.english-heritage.org.uk/resultsingle.aspx?uid=1376232, retrieved 28 April 2011 
  2. ^ Hartwell, Claire; Hyde, Matthew; Hubbard, Edward; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2011) [1971], Cheshire, The Buildings of England, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, p. 257, ISBN 978-0-300-17043-6 
  3. ^ Pevsner, Nikolaus; Hubbard, Edward (2003) [1971], Cheshire, The Buildings of England, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, p. 163, ISBN 0-300-09588-0 
  4. ^ My Store: Chester - Browns of Chester, Debenhams, http://www.debenhams.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/category_10001_10001_65599_-1, retrieved 4 August 2009 
  5. ^ Morriss, Richard (1993), The Buildings of Chester, Dover: Alan Sutton, p. 19, ISBN 0-7509-0255-8 

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