Tyne and Wear HER(9000): 28 to 62 Collingwood Street (Collingwood Bu) - Details
9000
Newcastle
28 to 62 Collingwood Street (Collingwood Bu)
Newcastle
NZ26SW
Commercial
Bank (Financial)
Bank (Financial)
POST MEDIEVAL
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Extant Building
This building was listed Grade II in 1987 with the following description:
'Bank, shops and offices. 1899 including hotel by Oliver and Leeson; completed 1903 by Cackett and Burns Dick, adapting the hotel part for use as a bank. Sandstone ashlar with grey granite porches; dark slate roof. Free Baroque style with much carved decoration. 4 storeys and attics; 3-bay curved left entrance section and 11 wide bays. Arcaded ground floor, Giant Corinthian Order above. Tuscan columns to revolving doors in left corner and to recessed entrance in central bay; bank entrance in bay 4. Deep, panelled soffits enclose lunettes with glazing bars over central office entrance and over 5 left tripartite windows; similar soffits to 5 right Diocletian windows. 2-storey oriels above central entrance, second bay either side and end bays. Plain sashes in inter- mediate bays and in third floor, tripartite over oriels. Alternately-pedimented dormers contain round-headed windows, Venetian above oriels. Mansard roof. Interior banking hall shows high quality stucco decoration by Laidler of Newcastle and mahogany fittings by Waring and Gillow of Lancaster and London designed by Cackett and Burns Dick. Source: Newcastle Daily Journal 23rd May 1903.' {1}.
Begun as shops, offices and a hotel. Big arched windows, giant Corinthian order. Marble-lined banking hall inserted 1903 by Cackett & Burns Dick for Barclays Bank, with mahogany fittings designed by Waring & Gillow and stucco ceiling by G.G. Laidler. In 2013 Nos. 22-36 is Madame Koo and Floritas Miami Bar, No. 34 is the Mint, No. 40 is Revolution bar. LISTED GRADE 2
424830
563990
NZ424830563990
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural and Historic Interest, 20/202 and 23/202; Grace McCombie, 2009, Newcastle and Gateshead - Pevsner Architectural Guide, p. 161; https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1115694