Identification and description | |||||||
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Name | Barrow Park | ||||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 54.118047 Longitude: -3.2179987 National Grid Reference: SD2048469817 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1437665 Date first listed: 21-Oct-2016 Location Description:Bordered by Abbey Road, Park Drive and Park Avenue. |
A new public park for Barrow in Furness was designed by Thomas Mawson in 1900. Part
of the proposed park was fenced off in 1902 and opened as a public space, but it was
not until 1907 that the council decided to proceed with the laying out of the park.
The Borough Surveyor produced a new plan based on Mawson’s original design, which
was largely implemented between 1908 and 1915 including: a lake, an upper and lower
shelter, three bowling greens, a bandstand with seated terraces, tennis courts and
a refreshment pavilion. The pre-existing Piel House was incorporated into the new
park and provided accommodation for the head gardener and park keeper. In 1920 the
First World War memorial was added as the focal point of the park, and in 1924 the
boating lake was extended to the S and provided with a pair of bridges. In 1965 the
bandstand was demolished. The park underwent restoration in 2002, when major work
included the erection of a new bandstand to designs of the original, the replacement
of the 1960s gates and piers at the inserted NW entrance with those based on an original
(unbuilt) design by Mawson, and the restoration of the lower shelter. The park won
the Landscape Institute’s Heritage and Conservation Award in 2007.
Thomas Hayton Mawson is a garden designer and town planner of national importance,
who became the first President of the Institute of Landscape Architects, was a President
of the Royal Town Planning Institute and an honorary member of the RIBA. More than
20 of his designed landscapes are included on the Register, one at Grade I and three
others at Grade II*. His designs were site-led, each garden and landscape being subtly
different from the others. Mawson is widely considered the founder of modern landscape
architecture and garden design. As well undertaking private commissions Mawson took
town planning and the design of public parks very seriously, writing 'Civic Art: Studies
in Town Planning, Parks, Boulevards and Open Spaces' in 1911.
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Barrow Park lies to the NW of the town
centre of Barrow in Furness, bounded by Abbey Road, Park Drive, Greengate Street and
Park Avenue to the NW, NE, SE and SW respectively. It is roughly an S-plan and comprises
a total of 18.5 ha. It is bounded on the principal NW side by a red sandstone wall
with double-chamfered copings, on the NE side by mid-C20 metal railings and property
boundaries and on the SW side by similar railings and an earthen embankment. On the
SE side the site is demarcated by an earthen bank set with Willow trees. The park
partially occupies a low knoll, the top of which forms the centre point and from where
the ground falls away to the W, S and E.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The original principal entrances to the park are situated
at its NE corner off Abbey Road and at the NW and SW corners of Park Avenue. The Abbey
Road entrance has C21 rusticated red sandstone piers with rectangular caps and ball
finials, while the others have mid-C20 metal gates and posts. An entrance at the west
end of Abbey Road is a C21 construction to an unbuilt Mawson design for one of the
original principal gates; this has gate piers of alternating sandstone and ashlar
with large ball finials, attached arches, also with ball finials, and curving, flanking
walls. In the early C20 a new entrance was created from Park Drive immediately N of
the boating lake.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING The circular focal point of the original design stands at the highest
part of the park on its W side and contains the centrally placed First World War memorial
(listed at Grade II). The memorial is an imposing landmark in the form of a cenotaph
in Portland Stone set upon a large circular platform, with railings between four flights
of steps with piers and balustrades.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The park has a curvilinear design with a perimeter path
creating an overall S-shaped structure. This is flanked to the outside by curvilinear
lawns and beds which define the park boundaries; some have stone edging and all contain
a variety of shrubs and trees. The circular focal point of the park, containing a
war memorial, is situated at the highest point and is incorporated into the perimeter
path on its SW side, from where the ground slopes down on all sides. The surrounding
area is divided by curvilinear paths into eight informal lawned compartments, most
with original irregularly shaped beds and stands of trees. In the NE corner of the
park, Piel House and walled garden occupy one of the compartments. Piel House is of
red brick with pitched, graduated slate roofs and has three bays, one gabled and the
entrance bay with a porch supported to the front by ornate ashlar columns. To the
E of the war memorial, the land slopes down steeply to level, lower lying ground,
which forms a shallow semi circular bowl focussed on the bandstand. Descending the
slope between the two is a broad, axial flight of steps composed of narrow red bricks
with concrete edging and treads, flanked by linear flower beds and hedges. The flight
of steps is interrupted by a wide terrace set at right angles to it with shrubberies
to each end. Seating recesses and a square emplacement are incorporated to either
side of the stairs and an Arts and Crafts inspired timber shelter with seating, bracketed
eaves and timber braces occupies the more northerly of these emplacements; it has
a half-hipped roof of clay tile with a heart and geometrical symbols to the half-hip.
Further to the E between the terrace and bandstand the layout is more formal with
a geometric design of paths and terraces radiating out from the bandstand. The latter
is executed in identical style to the shelter, and, set on a low wall of red sandstone,
is surrounded by a path of red brick and a clipped hedge. This formal layout continues
to the level ground SE of the bandstand, but here its design is more recreational
in character: a path continues the axis of the flight of steps with a pair of bowling
greens to the S with a former tennis ground beyond and to the N a former tennis court
and putting green with a C21 pavilion cafe and children's play area to the N. This
area terminates in a pair of bowling greens. Further to the E there is a large low
lying curvilinear boating lake (comprising two distinct parts) with corresponding
curvilinear perimeter paths. The N part retains the curvilinear western profile of
Mawson's original, smaller lake design. A central island dividing the two parts is
crossed by a curving path, which is also carried across narrow lake sections by a
pair of concrete foot bridges with art deco parapets. To the N of the lake there is
a timber boathouse with mock-timbering to the gable, a half-hipped building known
as the old pals club and the second of the park's original shelters, the latter of
identical design to the first. These buildings are set within curvilinear lawns and
more formal flower beds.
Public park to original designs of Thomas Mawson, amended by the Borough Surveyor and mostly laid out between 1908 and 1915. It is roughly an S-plan and comprises a total of 18.5 ha.
This garden or other land is registered under the Historic Buildings and Ancient Monuments Act 1953 within the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens by Historic England for its special historic interest.
This early C20 public park designed by Thomas Mawson, and re-drawn by the Borough Surveyor, is added to the Register at Grade II for the following principal reasons: * Date: a good example of a public park laid out principally between 1908 and 1915; * Landscaping: significant attention has been paid to the landscaping and enhancement of the natural topography to produce three main areas of differing character unified by a north-south axis; * Degree of survival: the core of the original park remains substantially intact and very closely reflects its original design; * Designer: Thomas Mawson is a renowned national figure and acknowledged as the founder of modern landscape architecture and design.
Books and journals
Waymark, J, Thomas Mawson: Life, Gardens and Landscapes, (2009)
Websites
Harriet Jordan, ‘Mawson, Thomas Hayton (1861–1933)’, rev. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 02-08-2016 from http://www.oxforddnb.com/templates/cite.jsp?articleid=37748
Other
Barrow in Furness Public Park Managment Plan Sept 2006
Second Edition Ordnance Survey Map 1:2500 (1913)
Third Edition Ordnance Survey Map 1:2500 (1933)