Reg No
13705038
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Artistic, Historical, Social
Original Use
Church/chapel
In Use As
Church/chapel
Date
1855 - 1860
Coordinates
305440, 307434
Date Recorded
10/08/2005
Date Updated
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Attached double-height gable-fronted chapel, built 1859, in the Gothic style. T-plan, three-bays to nave, single-bay to chapels to transepts. Part of Convent of Mercy complex with front elevation to street, rear at convent courtyard. Attached to convent and school buildings to east and west, accessed via internal corridor. Pitched slate roof, stone crucifix finial to gable apex, cast-iron buttress on corbelled eaves, circular downpipes. Squared-and-snecked limestone walling, random rubble stone to transepts cut stone dressings, corner buttresses. Pointed arch window openings, hood mouldings, cut stone surrounds, flush sills, containing tracery leaded stained glass windows, paired lattice windows to side chapel. Accessed via internal door.
Reputedly designed by John Neville, the County Surveyor, this convent chapel is a fine exercise in the hard Gothic style. Part of a fine terrace, the Seatown Place elevation adds to the attractive variety of periods and styles that make up the convent and school buildings and it makes a valuable contribution to the urban streetscape.