History in Structure

Ockley Railway Station, Rhumbles and the Coach House

A Grade II Listed Building in Ockley, Surrey

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.1516 / 51°9'5"N

Longitude: -0.336 / 0°20'9"W

OS Eastings: 516474

OS Northings: 140461

OS Grid: TQ164404

Mapcode National: GBR HHG.RV2

Mapcode Global: VHGSM.4B61

Plus Code: 9C3X5M27+JH

Entry Name: Ockley Railway Station, Rhumbles and the Coach House

Listing Date: 5 May 2000

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1380139

English Heritage Legacy ID: 479635

ID on this website: 101380139

Location: Mole Valley, Surrey, RH5

County: Surrey

District: Mole Valley

Civil Parish: Ockley

Traditional County: Surrey

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Surrey

Church of England Parish: Ockley, Okewood and Forest Green

Church of England Diocese: Guildford

Tagged with: Architectural structure

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Description


TQ 14 SE OCKLEY STATION APPROACH
1896/8/10023 Ockley Railway Station,
Rhumbles and the Coach House

II

Railway station, later two houses and railway station. Built in 1867 as a country station for the London, Brighton and South Coast railway. Comprises former stationmaster's house (now Rhumbles), booking office (now the Coach House) with canopy, stairs under the platforms and shelters. 1901 extension to booking office in matching style, covering of steps to the subway in 1892 and circa 1923 extension to the canopy. One or two late C20 windows. Station building of red brick with yellow brick dressings, polychrome yellow and black brickwork and slate roof. Former stationmaster's house to left is of two storeys and L-shaped. Left end bay has C20 uPVC window to first floor and built on late C20 conservatory. Projecting gable has wooden bargeboards and double chimneystack set at angle. Yellow brick band and pilasters. Cambered first floor window and paired cambered window to ground floor. Former booking hall to right was formerly set back and L-shaped but this was filled in by 1901 extension. One storey red brick. Two cambered sashes with verticals and central cambered doorcase to left. Right side has gable end with bargeboards, yellow brick pilasters and paired cambered sashes to ground floor. Side elevation has one cambered window and one cambered door with 4 panels. All rear elevation windows are intact apart from the end window of the former stationmaster's house. Some frosted glass. Interior of stationmaster's house retains half-winder staircase and cambered brick fireplaces. Attached to the rear is a 6 bay all wooden canopy with fretted edge supported on chamfered posts with chamfered brackets. Underground steps with wood and glazed canopy of 1892 lead to 1867 wooden shelter on London side platform. This is one storey of three bays with frame of thin chamfered posts with midrail, mullioned and transomed wooden surrounds to windows, four brackets to outside which is clad in vertical planks and the interior has a built-in bench around all sides supported on wooden brackets. The central section had been removed just prior to the inspection.
(Original contract drawings of 1867 survive in Railtrack's archives. 1901 booking office extension L B&SCR Engineering Committee Minutes 25/9/01, Public Record Office RAIL 414.
1892 covering of subway steps LB&SCR E.C.M. 9/2/92.)

Listing NGR: TQ1647440461

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