1
Il Bertorelli, 8 Low Pavement, Nottingham
In baby Bruges Gothic by the architect A. R. Calvert dating from 1903.
Image: © Andrew Abbott
Taken: 12 Jun 2010
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2
No.8, Low Pavement, Nottingham, NG1
This Grade II-listed former office building, dated 1903, is now a restaurant.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 5 Nov 2017
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3
4-6 Low Pavement, Nottingham
By Lawrence L. Bright and William C. Thoms planned in 1915 but not built until 1920.
Image: © Andrew Abbott
Taken: 12 Jun 2010
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4
8-10 Low Pavement, Nottingham
No. 8, by A.R. Calvert, 1903, has a disproportionately large crow-stepped gable, and not much besides. No. 10, by Alfred Smith, 1876, is Victorian Gothic Revival at its most rebarbative. Both grade II listed.
Both occupied by Prezzo, a chain of Italian restaurants.
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 17 Jun 2012
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5
4-6 Low Pavement, Nottingham
By Lawrence L. Bright & William C. Thoms, 1920. Pevsner calls the style "Arts and Crafts classical". I can't see a great deal of the former, except perhaps the window details and gently bowed centre. Grade II listed.
Occupied by a branch of stationers, Paperchase.
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 17 Jun 2012
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6
The Old Assembly Rooms, 9 Low Pavement, Nottingham
Former assembly rooms, later used as post office, now offices. C18, altered 1790 by John Carr, further altered 1807, refronted 1836 by Thomas Winter, converted C20. Brick, with painted ashlar front. Listed Grade II.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 1 Apr 2019
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7
Low Pavement, Nottingham
Image: © Mark Anderson
Taken: 26 Jun 2012
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8
Datestone, Enfield Chambers, Low Pavement, Nottingham
See http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/6100533 for location.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 24 Mar 2019
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9
Looking down Low Pavement
The public are making good use of the pedestrianised Low Pavement, which is a narrow cobbled walkway in the centre of Nottingham.
Image: © Malcolm Neal
Taken: 13 Dec 2019
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10
Low Pavement on a damp November morning
Nikolaus Pevsner illustrated No 18 - just to the left of centre here, with white-framed Venetian windows - in The Buildings of England and had a fair bit to say. In the revised version of "Nottinghamshire" Elizabeth Williamson elaborated: "No 10 (1876) is a wild version of the Butterfield type of Gothicism by one of the less squeamish designers (Alfred Smith of Nottingham)...On the S side the most imposing building is Willoughby House (Nos 20-22), built c. 1738...set back behind a small courtyard with fine wrought-iron railings and gate. Red brick. Main doorcase with broken segmental pediment and moulded keystone on Roman Ionic columns...Ionic columns appear in the next-door house, No 18, also early C18, with Venetian windows on each of the three floors. In the lowest the centre light breaks through a pediment."
Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 21 Nov 2009
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