Torbay Council
Listed building outline: Tower House School 383797
Legend
- Torbay Council boundary
- Listed building outlines
Tower House School 383797
- geometry
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MULTIPOLYGON (((-3.569997 50.431737,-3.570070 50.431702,-3.570086...
- end-date
- entry-date
- 1993-10-25
- listed-building
- 1279603
- name
- Tower House School
- notes
- Villa, extended and reused as a school. 1890 (datestone), 1930s extension. Free Beaux Arts style. MATERIALS: Yellow Flemish bond brick with local grey limestone dressings; roof concealed behind parapet; brick stacks with corbelled caps and old chimney pots. PLAN: Set back from the road with a large garden in front. Deep rectangular plan: entrance from Mabel Place. EXTERIOR: 3 and 4 storeys. Asymmetrical 3-bay front with left and right clasping pilasters with chanelled rustication; moulded eaves cornice above frieze of alternating brackets and stamped tiles; balustraded parapet with terracotta urn finials. Left-hand bay bow-fronted, central bay breaks forward and rises as a 4-storey tower with polished granite pilasters to left and right. Moulded string course with chevron frieze at 2nd floor level. Windows glazed with 2-pane plate glass sashes, some with smaller panes in the head. Ground-floor windows with stone lintels; pilastered first-floor windows, those to the bow with chanelled rustication, glazed with plate-glass sashes with smaller panes in the upper light. The right-hand block has 2 high-transomed French windows onto a 2-bay balcony on stone corbels. Balcony has pretty cast-iron balustrade and cast- and wrought-iron vertical panels and is covered with a glazed roof. Second-floor windows have pilastered architraves, shallow balconies and sill blocks. Upper stage of tower has triple round-headed window with moulded architraves and pilasters. Projecting porch on right return has moulded cornice below balustraded parapet. Pilasters with sunk panels and carved capitals. Round-headed pilastered stone doorway with recessed panelled door, upper panels glazed, and plain fanlight. The right return of the porch has a pilastered round-headed window with sill blocks, filled with stained glass. The left end of the building is a 1930s extension, purpose-built as a gymnasium. INTERIOR: The main block retains much of Bailey's interior, which is lavish. Hallway with tiled floor. Doors to principal ground floor rooms are panelled with elaborate moulded and pilastered doorcases with pediment overdoors, richly-modelled plaster ceiling friezes. Main stair has turned newels and cast-iron balustrades. Second stair down to ballroom at rear - this room was divided by the Marist sisters. First floor retains good doors and plasterwork friezes. Quantities of stained glass, both internal screens and in external windows, including the stair window. HISTORY: Built by Henry John Bailey, responsible for Bailey's Emporium (qv No.44 Totnes Road) and Coniston in Sands Road (qv). The house was sold to the Marist Sisters in 1908 and became a convent school which closed in 1982 (Tully). Tully's book reproduces a c1920 photograph of the building before the left end additions. (Tully P: Peter Tully's Pictures of Paignton, Part II: 1992-: 22). Listing NGR: SX8858660269
- reference
- 383797
- start-date
- 1993-10-25
- listed-building-grade
- address-text
- organisation
- description
- uprns
- NAME,NAME_2