History in Structure

Elm Street School (County Primary School)

A Grade II* Listed Building in East Middleton, Rochdale

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.55 / 53°33'0"N

Longitude: -2.1768 / 2°10'36"W

OS Eastings: 388382

OS Northings: 405948

OS Grid: SD883059

Mapcode National: GBR FW7D.J4

Mapcode Global: WHB99.J1N9

Plus Code: 9C5VHR2F+27

Entry Name: Elm Street School (County Primary School)

Listing Date: 19 September 1969

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1356229

English Heritage Legacy ID: 213447

ID on this website: 101356229

Location: Mills Hill, Rochdale, Greater Manchester, M24

County: Rochdale

Electoral Ward/Division: East Middleton

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Middleton (Rochdale)

Traditional County: Lancashire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Greater Manchester

Church of England Parish: Tonge-cum-Alkrington St Michael

Church of England Diocese: Manchester

Tagged with: Architectural structure

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Middleton

Description


MIDDLETON ELM STREET
SD 80 NE
(west side)
2/7 Elm Street School
(County Primary
19/9/69 School)
- II*
School. 1908-10. By Edgar Wood and J. Henry Sellers. Brick
with stone dressings and concrete roofs. 9-bay hall with
towers at either end forms the centre of the design.
Cloisters extend forward to meet Elm Street at left and
right (boys and girls) and enclose a formally planned garden
and a suite of offices which have a concaved single-storey
facade. Beyond the arms of cloisters are parallel ranges of
classrooms and a long range adjoins the hall at the rear.
The design is compactly planned along formal lines. The hall
has 9 round-arched windows with impost blocks and keystones
to front and rear. The hipped roof sits behind a coped
parapet which steps above a recessed brick panel in each
bay, a feature which is repeated elsewhere. Towers to left
and right with stone top stages form dominant features. The
cross-vaulted cloisters have entrances on Elm Street with
rusticated segmental arches and banded corner pilasters.Some
of the arches have been blocked and only one set of cast-
iron gates remains. The concaved office front has a series of
flat-faced stone mullion windows (many leaded casements have
been removed) on either side of central double doors. The
classroom ranges to either side and to the rear (of 6 and 21
bays respectively) have segmental-arched windows with stone
sills and are articulated by advanced bays which have a
higher parapet level. Small later additions to left and
right. Interior: many original features survive including
doors and a moulded plaster ceiling to the hall. The school
was designed to established new standards of hygiene in
educaton and was the first municipal school (along with
Durnford Street School, q.v.) in Middleton. The building is
technically and architecturally advanced, the use of
reinforced concrete allowing more freedom of planning.
J.H.G. Archer, "Edgar Wood (1860-1935)" Transactions of the
Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society, vol. 73-4,
1963-4.


Listing NGR: SD8838205948

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