Station Road, Newburn Hotel
Station Road, Newburn Hotel
HER Number
16285
District
Newcastle
Site Name
Station Road, Newburn Hotel
Place
Newburn
Class
Commercial
Site Type: Broad
Hotel
Site Type: Specific
Hotel
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Description
The Newburn Hotel was built in 1894 and stood close to the former Newburn Station and may have been intended to accommodate business visitors to the former Spencer's Works. It is built in a free broadly Jacobean style, of orange brick with ashlar dressings, and a green Lakeland slate roof, with stepped-and-corniced stacks, two to the west wing; one to the east and one at the east end of the central block. The building is of an irregular H plan; the two wings barely project towards the south and both return outwards at their north ends. On the north of the main building is a yard, with a former coach house range on the north, with a further yard enclosed by single-storied stables to the west; the west side of the building overlooks a garden. The building has overall been altered little externally but has been considerably remodelled internally, although the prinicpal staircase remains an attractive feature. The hotel also has a range of outbuildings including a former coach house and lower building to the east. The buildings were recorded in 2012 by The Archaeological Practice Ltd. ahead the redevelopment of the hotel and the construction of houses in the hotel garden.
Easting
416500
Northing
565320
Grid Reference
NZ416500565320
Sources
The Archaeological Practice Ltd., 2012, Former Newburn Hotel, Newburn, Newcastle upon Tyne - archaeological assessment and historic building recording; Bennison, B, 1998, Lost Weekends, A History of Newcastle's Public Houses, Vol 3, The West