Motcombe Court, Bedford Avenue: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox|[[File:Motcombe Court - geograph.org.uk - 1318995.jpg|thumb|class=pageimage]]|1938|Henry Tanner|Walter Lawrence & Son|w176210721|50.83950|0.48325}}
{{Infobox
 
|image=[[File:Motcombe Court - geograph.org.uk - 1318995.jpg|thumb|class=pageimage]]
|date=1938
|architect=Henry Tanner
|builder=Walter Lawrence & Son
|use=Residential
|osmid=w176210721
|lat=50.83950|lng=0.48325
}}
Motcombe Court is a Moderne style white-rendered block of flats designed by the architect Henry Tanner F.R.I.B.A. in 1938. Tanner was one of the most celebrated architects of the pre-war period. He held the post of President of the Architectural Association and completed some of the most important commissions of the time in London including the Dickens & Jones Department Store, Strand Palace Hotel, Oceanic House for the White Star Line at Pall Mall and others. The Park Lane Hotel in London is perhaps Tanner’s best known work and is frequently described as one of the finest 1930s buildings in London.
Motcombe Court is a Moderne style white-rendered block of flats designed by the architect Henry Tanner F.R.I.B.A. in 1938. Tanner was one of the most celebrated architects of the pre-war period. He held the post of President of the Architectural Association and completed some of the most important commissions of the time in London including the Dickens & Jones Department Store, Strand Palace Hotel, Oceanic House for the White Star Line at Pall Mall and others. The Park Lane Hotel in London is perhaps Tanner’s best known work and is frequently described as one of the finest 1930s buildings in London.


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It has a T-plan with its tail facing the seafront giving flats at the rear sea views, five storeys with the balconies are stacked at the corners.  
It has a T-plan with its tail facing the seafront giving flats at the rear sea views, five storeys with the balconies are stacked at the corners.  
The main entrance is on Bedford Road – elegant fluted pilasters crowned with rectangular urns frame the doorway.  
The main entrance is on Bedford Road – elegant fluted pilasters crowned with rectangular urns frame the doorway.
 
A 500kg bomb demolished three upper floors of the east wing in 1943. The building was unoccupied apart from the caretaker who suffered superficial injuries. Rebuilt in 1946.<ref>[https://bexhill-osm.org.uk/?t=tour&g=bombmap&u=ww2&i=bb118#17/50.83953/0.48317 Bexhill-OSM: WWII Incident Map]</ref>


[[Category:All]]
[[Category:All]]