Buildings on the City's Local List
Birmingham City Council's Planning Committee has established a
Local List to identify buildings, structures and features which
are of architectural, historic or archaeological interest, but
which have not been statutorily listed by the Department of National
Heritage. The Birmingham Plan, adopted by the City Council in
July 1993, states in section 3.26: 'The demolition of buildings
on the 'Local List' of buildings of architectural or historic
interest will be resisted to the extent of the powers available.
Proposals for the demolition, alteration and/or extension of a
building on the 'Local List' should ensure that the features of
historic or architectural interest are preserved and that all
new work is in keeping with the character of the original building
and its setting.'
A grading system has been introduced to signify the relative
importance of buildings added to the list and is as follows:-
Grade A
This is of statutory list quality. T o be the subject of notification
to the Department of National Heritage and/or the serving of a
Building Preservation Notice if imminently threatened.
Grade B
Important in the City-wide architectural or local street scene
context, warranting positive efforts to ensure retention.
Grade C
Of significance in the local historical/vernacular context, including
industrial archaeological features.
Descriptions have been mostly provided by the Conservation Unit of the City
Council: we thank them for their help.

The Fire Station (Grade B), Alexander Road
This was built c. 1921, replacing gardens at the back of the
police station. It closed in 1993, when a new fire station at
Speedwell Road opened. Red brick and buff terracotta; tile roof. Single-storey;
two bays, the right hand bay set forward and containing a pair of tall,
half-glazed doors set in a flat arched opening with bold keystone, all under a
brick and terracotta striped gable bearing the words "Fire Station" in
raised terracotta letters. The left hand bay is lower and contains a doorway and
single window.

The caretaker's house on
Alexander Road (Grade A)
Caretaker's house to right hand side of 1903 church hall (see
statutorily listed buildings page). Two-storeys, two window front. Canted bay to
right on ground floor with lead roof. Timber casements throughout.

Baptist church hall (on corner of Alexander and Yardley Roads) (Grade A)
Built 1924. Red/brown brick; tile roof. Single-storey. Occupies corner site.
Entrance front of asymmetrical composition with recessed door in arched opening
with half-timbered gable above. Side elevation of three bays; five windows in
the rhythm 1:3:1. Symmetrical composition with tall gabled bays at each end
containing recessed bow windows set between brick piers under a half timber
gable. Steep roof topped by Arts and Crafts style femerell with three hipped
dormers. Casement windows with glazing bars throughout.


The Police Station on Yardley Road (Grade B)
Built 1909 for Yardley Rural District Council. Included a courthouse. Red
brick and terracotta; tile roof. Two-storeys. Almost symmetrical elevation to
Yardley Road. Central section with rusticated ground floor, above which is a
central pedimented bay with flanking projecting bays with segmental pediments.
To either side are two-storey canted bays. Sliding sash windows throughout. On
corner with Alexander Road is an octagonal turret with lead dome and keyed
ocular windows. Low boundary wall with mould terracotta coping.
50 Yardley Road, corner of Elmdon Road (Grade A)
Built for John Nicol by Essex, Nicol and Goodman, c. 1903.
A detached residential property on corner plot, brick ground floor,
render upper. Tile hanging to gables. Original ornate fenestration
comprising leaded coloured glass. 2 ornate bays with buff terracotta
dressings, square stone portico. Coach house converted to ground
floor room. Stylistic mix of Arts and Crafts and Edwardian influences.
To rear an addition c. 1980 of similar scale, massing and materials. At present
we have no photograph, as the building is hidden by scaffolding.

The Library on Shirley Road (Grade A)
1932. Architects Messrs. J.P. Osborne and Sons, builder Mr.
J. Emlyn Williams of Aston, masonry work by Wragg Bros of Kings
Heath, terrazo by Lyne and Sons of Birmingham, and hand-made facing
bricks by J.W.D. Pratt of Oldbury. Externally the building is
in modernised Georgian style, in sandstone bricks and Grinshill
stone. The City's Coat of Arms is over the main door. Internal
joinery is of oak, including substantial areas of glazed oak framing,
and the floors and dados in the entrance hall are terrazzo. Refurbished
1994-5.
|