St Valery, Beulah Hill

Introduction

The photograph on this page of St Valery, Beulah Hill by Stephen Richards as part of the Geograph project.

The Geograph project started in 2005 with the aim of publishing, organising and preserving representative images for every square kilometre of Great Britain, Ireland and the Isle of Man.

There are currently over 7.5m images from over 14,400 individuals and you can help contribute to the project by visiting https://www.geograph.org.uk

St Valery, Beulah Hill

Image: © Stephen Richards Taken: Unknown

A large Victorian villa, now flats, by local architectural rebel Sextus Dyball (see also: Image]) in 1880. Built of yellow stock brick with decorative bands of red brick and with a prominent tower. Grade II listed. Dyball was a speculative builder-architect who designed a number of buildings in the area. Jonathan Meades wrote of him that he was "a local builder to whom all devotees of inspired ugliness and sinister gracelessness will be forever indebted. Did Dyball know what he was doing? Did he have any idea of the sensations that his creations would provoke? It is improbable that he was out to shock. Rather, it seems that he ... subscribed to an aesthetic system that, although not far from us, feels chronologically, seems unfathomably distant – a vestige of an alien civilisation."

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0

Image Location

coordinates on a map icon
Latitude
51.415565
Longitude
-0.093138