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Buxton Crescent
src: buxtoncrescent.com

Buxton Crescent is a Grade-I-listed building in the town of Buxton, Derbyshire, England. Owing much to the Royal Crescent in Bath, but described by the Royal Institution of British Architects as "more richly decorated and altogether more complex", it was designed by the architect John Carr, and built for the Fifth Duke of Devonshire between 1780 and 1789.


Video Buxton Crescent



Location

The Crescent faces the site of St Ann's Well, where warm spring water has flowed for thousands of years. The well is at the foot of The Slopes, a steep landscaped hillside in the centre of Buxton. Here the geological strata channel mineral water from a mile below ground, to emerge at a constant 27.5 °C (81.5 °F).


Maps Buxton Crescent



Current setting

Originally detached, the Crescent building is now the centrepiece of an attached range facing The Slopes.

  • To the left (southwest) are the Natural Mineral Baths (Grade II listed, 1851-53, by Henry Currey), recently the tourist office but now empty; followed by the Old Hall Hotel (1572, altered 1672, rebuilt 1725-35, listed Grade II*), and still a hotel.
  • To the right (northeast) are the Buxton Thermal Baths, now shops; and The Colonnade, a row of shops with a projecting canopy (both Grade II listed, 1851-53, also by Currey).
  • Across the forecourt of the Crescent, at the foot of The Slopes, are the Pump Room (1894, also by Currey); and the adjacent public drinking spout St Ann's Well, built c.1940, on the site of earlier wells dating back to the Roman period.

PROJ3CTM4YH3M Urban Exploration | Urbex: Buxton Crescent, Buxton ...
src: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com


Original construction and use

The Crescent was built for William Cavendish, the 5th Duke of Devonshire, as part of his scheme to establish Buxton as a fashionable Georgian spa town.

The facade forms an arc of a circle facing southeast. It was built as a unified structure incorporating a hotel, five lodging houses, and a grand assembly room with a fine painted ceiling. The Assembly Rooms became the social heart of 18th-century Buxton.

On the ground floor arcade were shops (including a hair and wig-dresser) and kitchens were in the basement.


Fitness Archives - Darnton B3
src: www.darntonb3.com


Subsequent history

Over time, St. Ann's Hotel at the western end of the Crescent, and the Great Hotel, incorporating the Assembly Rooms at the eastern end, took over the intervening lodging houses in the centre of the building.

Twentieth century

The western end served as a hotel. The eastern end served as council offices, a library and a clinic. The hotel at the western end closed in the mid-1980s due to the high cost of necessary repairs. The whole building was closed when major structural problems were discovered in the assembly rooms, and by 1992 lay empty. The hotel part was bought by the local council in 1993, at which time the whole building fell into public ownership.


Buxton Crescent and Thermal Spa - Old Hall Hotel
src: www.oldhallhotelbuxton.co.uk


Current developments

In 1993 with a grant from the National Heritage Memorial Fund the High Peak Borough Council purchased the Crescent to act as a temporary caretaker of the building until a suitable buyer could be found. A further £1.5 million from English Heritage was used to make the building weathertight.

The Crescent, Pump Rooms and Natural Baths buildings were then jointly marketed by the borough and county councils. In 1994 the Monumental Trust proposed a scheme to convert the Crescent into flats; however, no funding was found. In December 2000 the combined councils applied to the Heritage Lottery Fund to help finance plans to restore the Crescent as a hotel and to build new spa facilities. Funding was approved in July 2003.

Work to restore, redevelop and manage the hotel and spa was put out to tender, which was won in December 2003 by a partnership of the Trevor Osborne Property Group Limited and CP Holdings Limited, the parent company of the spa hotel specialists Danubius hotels. The then £23 million plan was scheduled for completion in 2007.

However the project suffered a series of delays, including funding and technical and legal issues relating to the continued supply of water from springs beneath the buildings to NestlĂ©, the bottler of Buxton Water, and it was not until April 2012 that an agreement between the joint councils and the developer to start the first phase of the project could be signed. Phase one work on the then £35 million project for a 79-bedroom 5-star hotel, natural baths, a visitor interpretation centre, a thermal mineral water spa and specialist shops commenced in the summer of 2012. Funding problems delayed the main part of project further, but with a loan guarantee from Derbyshire County Council and an additional grant of £11.3 million from the Heritage Lottery Fund announced in 2014, work is expected to resume in 2015. A further £2 million is still required for the £46 million development.


Buxton Baths Stock Photos & Buxton Baths Stock Images - Alamy
src: c8.alamy.com


References


PROJ3CTM4YH3M Urban Exploration | Urbex: Buxton Crescent, Buxton ...
src: www.proj3ctm4yh3m.com


External links

  • High Peak Council Press Release
  • Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1257876)". National Heritage List for England. 
  • Article with picture of Assembly Room ceiling Visit Buxton
  • Article with Image of Buxton Crescent in 1795 Royal Institute of British Architects
  • Newsletter of the regeneration project Buxton Crescent Hotel & Thermal Spa
  • Articles with photo galleries of CrescentCrescent HotelsPump Room iPeak

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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