St John the Evangelist, Penge
St. John the Evangelist's Church | |
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General information | |
Architectural style | Victorian architecture, Gothic Revival architecture |
Town or city | Penge, Kent |
Country | England |
Coordinates | 51°25′00″N 0°03′18″W / 51.4167°N 0.0550°WCoordinates: 51°25′00″N 0°03′18″W / 51.4167°N 0.0550°W |
Construction started | 1850 |
Completed | 1866 |
Client | Church of England |
Technical details | |
Structural system | Rock-faced ragstone masonry |
Design and construction | |
Architect | Edwin Nash & J. N. Round |
Saint John the Evangelist is the Church of England parish church of Penge, Kent, in the Diocese of Rochester, Greater London. It is located on Penge High Street, and was erected 1847 to designs of architects Edwin Nash & J. N. Round. Later in 1861, Nash alone added the gabled aisles, and in 1866 the transepts. The Pevsner Buildings of England series guides describe it as "Rock-faced ragstone. West tower and stone broach spire. Geometrical tracery, treated in Nash’s quirky way. The best thing inside is the open timber roofs, those in the transepts especially evocative, eight beams from all four directions meeting in mid air.[1]
The church is obscured in domineering Penge by the distant tower farther south on Beckhenham Road of the Fortress Romanesque-looking Congregational church, built 1912 to designs by P. Morley Horder with passage aisles and clerestory. Shafts on large, excellently carved corbels.[1]
References
- 1 2 John Newman. West Kent and the Weald. The “Buildings of England” Series, First Edition, Sir Nikolaus Pevsner and Judy Nairn, eds. (London: Penguin, 1969), p.433.