1
Peveril of The Peak
Looking north-east across Great Bridgewater Street, Manchester.
Image: © David Newton
Taken: 12 Jun 2009
0.01 miles
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Peveril of the Peak
Peveril of the Peak public house in Manchester.
Image: © Peter McDermott
Taken: 14 Jul 2013
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Peveril of the Peak, Manchester
Grade 2 listed building. This simple, two-storey mid-Victorian building was remodelled about 1900 and given a ceramic facing. On the ground floor it is yellowy-green, and above the orange name band it is cream. The fascia wording of 'Peveril Of The Peak' on two sides and 'Wines & Spirits' on the end of the building were covered by Wilsons Brewery standard signage until removed in the 1980s. The internal porches on both sides have fancy flanking tile bands of red, cream and green and good timber and glazed detailing. The interior has three rooms and a dog-leg corridor which also serves as a drinking lobby.
Image: © Matt Harrop
Taken: 10 Mar 2015
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4
Peveril of the Peak
This little pub stands on its own on the corner of Chepstow Street and Great Bridgewater Street. Its entire facade is covered in ceramic tiles.
Image: © Trevor Harris
Taken: 24 Oct 2009
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5
Peveril of the Peak, Manchester
One of Manchester's most distinctive and famous pubs.
Image: © Graham Hogg
Taken: 5 Jul 2010
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Peveril of The Peak
This famous triangular pub at the corner of Great Bridgewater St and Chepstow St is one of Manchester’s most distinctive public houses with its cladding of green and greenish-yellow ceramic tiles contrasting with the modern office and apartment blocks surrounding it.
The Peveril of the Peak was built in the 1820s and remodelled around the end of the nineteenth century (when the cladding was added) (http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-388001-peveril-of-the-peak-public-house- ). The name is said to commemorate a horse-drawn stagecoach that ran between Manchester and London (Market St. to London via Derbyshire) “Peveril” referring to Peveril Castle near Castleton (http://manchesterhistory.net/manchester/tours/tour6/area6page19.html Manchester History Net).
The building is Grade II listed as a “Good example of turn of the century public house remodelling and retains its contemporary plan, fittings and decoration” (http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-388001-peveril-of-the-peak-public-house- British Listed Buildings).
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 27 Sep 2012
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Peveril of the Peak, Great Bridgewater Street, Manchester
Early C19th but owing its jolly green exterior to a remodelling of c1900. Both fronts here are clad entirely in glazed tiles, extra attention being lavished upon the doorways (
Image]). Grade II listed.
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 17 May 2012
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Detail of Peveril of the Peak, Great Bridgewater Street, Manchester
Ornate tiled pilasters with capitals. The decorative panels in the pilasters have a definite tinge of Art Nouveau about them.
Full view here:
Image
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 17 May 2012
0.01 miles
9
Chepstow House, Chepstow Street, Manchester
Built for Samuel Mendel as a packing warehouse by Speakman, Son & Hickson, 1874. A long picturesque front topped by corner turret, gabled dormers and a square tower. Grade II listed.
It is now flats.
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 24 Jul 2011
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10
Barbirolli Square
The fountain playing in Barbirolli Square beside the Bridgewater Hall, Manchester.
Image: © Carroll Pierce
Taken: 24 Dec 2018
0.03 miles