92 Coatsworth Road, Honeysuckle Public House
92 Coatsworth Road, Honeysuckle Public House
HER Number
7426
District
Gateshead
Site Name
92 Coatsworth Road, Honeysuckle Public House
Place
Bensham
Map Sheet
NZ26SE
Class
Commercial
Site Type: Broad
Eating and Drinking Establishment
Site Type: Specific
Public House
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Early 20th Century 1901 to 1932
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Description
Rebuilt in the 1920s in an ornate and obtrusive late Edwardian style in red brick and with stone dressings to its arched windows, a corner turret and accentuated gables {2}. DESCRIPTION / STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE
This pub was rebuilt in the 1920s, towards the end of the great wave of rebuilding in Gateshead, exhibiting a certain commonality with the Blue Bell on the High Street in its use of granite and narrow, tall chimneys. It features a corner turret, a modest expression of the prevalent style, but otherwise is utterly unrestrained, utilising a cheerful variety of materials and a welter of detail. Standing on a pink granite moulded plinth, it then ascends through sandstone pilasters to a red brick upper storey with stone details, terminating in a graduated slate roof. The overall appearance is rather expansive and bustling, with every inch of the ground floor filled with the broad arched windows, slightly more modest sashes to the 1st floor, and the roof busy with turret, chimneys and dormers. The chimney to the front sports a whimsical dormer feature, quite idiosyncratic and possibly unique. An elaborate door canopy over the quadruple door to the corner completes the picture of conviviality, most suitable for a public house. Of particular interest are the leaded lights with coloured margin detail, with dentil moulding to the lower windows, and the curved windows to the corner, requiring that extra degree of craftsmanship, perhaps denoting a building designed to imply the wealth of its owners. It is pleasing that even the cast iron rainwater goods remain, and although the extension has a large footprint it is low and quite sympathetically designed, not detracting from the character of the original building. MATERIALS Pink granite, red brick, sandstone, timber, leaded lights LOCAL LIST
This pub was rebuilt in the 1920s, towards the end of the great wave of rebuilding in Gateshead, exhibiting a certain commonality with the Blue Bell on the High Street in its use of granite and narrow, tall chimneys. It features a corner turret, a modest expression of the prevalent style, but otherwise is utterly unrestrained, utilising a cheerful variety of materials and a welter of detail. Standing on a pink granite moulded plinth, it then ascends through sandstone pilasters to a red brick upper storey with stone details, terminating in a graduated slate roof. The overall appearance is rather expansive and bustling, with every inch of the ground floor filled with the broad arched windows, slightly more modest sashes to the 1st floor, and the roof busy with turret, chimneys and dormers. The chimney to the front sports a whimsical dormer feature, quite idiosyncratic and possibly unique. An elaborate door canopy over the quadruple door to the corner completes the picture of conviviality, most suitable for a public house. Of particular interest are the leaded lights with coloured margin detail, with dentil moulding to the lower windows, and the curved windows to the corner, requiring that extra degree of craftsmanship, perhaps denoting a building designed to imply the wealth of its owners. It is pleasing that even the cast iron rainwater goods remain, and although the extension has a large footprint it is low and quite sympathetically designed, not detracting from the character of the original building. MATERIALS Pink granite, red brick, sandstone, timber, leaded lights LOCAL LIST
Easting
425210
Northing
562380
Grid Reference
NZ425210562380
Sources
Gateshead Council Local List Fact Sheet X20/LL/044; Gateshead Council, 1999, Conservation Area Policy Guidelines, Strategies and Character Statements, Coatsworth Conservation Area, pp 25-31