Area 19 - The Square, High Street, Dragon Street, St Peter's Road. Also the Town Hall and open air swimming pool.

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Area contact - Vincent Edberg, to email CLICK HERE
| 1. Location in Town / Context |
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| 2. Vistas/Views |
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There is an important visual link between The Hangers to the north west and the north end of Rams Walk. The east and west views down the High Street are visually closed at both ends by buildings forming an urban space giving a distinct character to this important area which opens up into the larger space of the The Square. Visual contact with The Hangers from the Square end of Swan Street. Recently formed walkway south of The Drum public house will hopefully in time enjoy a more attractive backdrop than the telephone exchange. |
| 3. Landscaping |
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The central car park is landscaped with trees which will as they mature improve the visual appearance of this open space. Many of the trees lining the stream on the south side of the car park are splendid and mature and protected by TPO’s. Small wooded area between access to Boots and Physic Garden wall is intriguing, and could be sensitively developed by additional planting of bushes, flowers. The stream running along the south side of the car park is a potential feature that suffers from lack of imaginative attention. Railings are in places extremely basic and ugly made of scaffold pole style material. Position of neglected fountain memorial to Richard Barlow Kennett dated 1882 at south east corner of central car park is most unfortunate. There is a neglected green area on the town hall side of junction between Tor Way and College Street that could be attractively landscaped. The tendency to urban style planting within Petersfield should preferably be resisted. |
| 4. Building Characteristics |
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The High Street is one of the highlights of Petersfield displaying many of the finest buildings in town. The north side is in this respect more impressive ranging from a timber framed building with flint infill occupied by restaurants and shops, the classical style Lloyds Bank, the contemporary punctuation of Barclays Bank, the recent addition of opening into Rams Walk, Italianate and impressively rising NatWest Bank, to the fine old town houses such as 20 & 22 High Street to mention a few. The new building just north of the war memorial represents a lost design opportunity as a bland new frontage avoiding challenges of the day. A small scale sensitive experiment could have been appropriate in this location. Chapel Street is potentially attractive but suffers from poor maintenance of first floor premises in particular which in a way reflects a transition from The Square to Lavant Street. There is in addition a proliferation of poorly designed shop fronts. This gives the facades a disjointed and untidy expression. Buildings of particular interest are the art deco white rendered bank on the corner with Swan Street and further along on the same side The Drum public house. The three storey building on the west side above covered way to car park is curiously overpowering. Bakery Lane and ??? Lane are interesting, narrow pedestrian passages between Chapel Street and the Central Car Park which have a near medieval quality (but without the horse droppings!). The central car park is on the whole intelligently laid out and landscaped. Attention could perhaps be given to improving traffic circulation and also the inclusion of a public drop-off parking space at the end of Rams Walk. The edge to the west needs attention as does, in particular, the empty site on the corner with Park Road. Tall brick boundary wall on north side of the same road is dull. The supermarket complex to the south is perhaps heavy in scale but quite successful, as is the lean-to roof of the side walkway, and articulate roof shapes detract the eye away from large brick wall surfaces. Dragon Street displays a range of attractive buildings of which many are rendered. Dragon House stands out and although mainly timber frame was attractively refronted in the early 18th century with brickwork. The pleasantly simple design of other buildings are a reminder of the effectiveness of traditional Hampshire buildings saved from unnecessary clutter and ornament. The recently refurbished restaurant on the east side is a good example of displaying the at times striking similarity of sentiment between historic country buildings and quality contemporary design. The Town Hall car park is intriguing with the open air swimming pool building and 1930s Town Hall with 1980s extension along the east side forming a composition of interest. It is then surprising to find an uninspiring dull former doctors surgery left in the middle of the open space and a set of near derelict commercial buildings adjoining the old brewery. The local youth club, The King’s Arms, has been relegated to this part of town. St Peter’s Road is less prominent for the area. There is a disjointed mix of styles including many later buildings that attempt to blend in apart from an unfortunate mock Georgian office. The Infants' School represents a fascinating mix of new and old building styles although some of the colour scheme to window frames now feels dated. That feeling of anticipation arrives when turning the corner at Foggy’s (previously The Bell Inn) and into a narrow section of road opening dramatically up into the Square. |
| 5. Building Materials |
| The strong historic content of the building stock in the area provides a good library of traditional building materials for the area. Local clay used by Petersfield brickworks produced predominantly bricks and roof tiles in a warm terracotta colour. Uneven kiln burning would typically produce a pleasant multi effect to facing bricks. Elements of local but fragile malm stone, harder iron rich stone almost rust coloured and finally flint stone can also be found. Render and white wash is also common being a surface treatment introduced to either combat damp penetration or more commonly to display opulence by covering what was perceived to be common brick and stone. Common building materials from other corners of the country include roof slates that can be laid at a flatter pitch which complement certain building styles. The punctuation of yellow brick as seen on the Westminster Bank and Rams Walk shopping development add interest when appropriate but large scale use ought to be restrained in order not to lose the unique "Petersfield feel". |
| 6. Roofs |
Large-scale, pancake-style flattish roofs such as seen on the telephone exchange and later developments represented by Tesco and many buildings in the Petersfield business park do however lack relevance and interest. The same argument applies to 1960s residential development at the corner of The High Street and Dragon Street, where a lead-clad finish without eaves looks out of scale and dated. A small scale design of that kind would be more appropriate and have left a sample representing the thinking of that time. |
| 7. Special Features & Landmarks |
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| 8. Sustainability |
| There are no dominating solar panels or other mechanical devices visible in the area. Introduction of energy generating equipment will however become a consideration in times to come. Refurbishing efforts converting single glazing with double equivalent has not always been successful by introducing window frames of clumsy design or unattractive upvc finishes. Efforts have been made to encourage people to walk and/or cycle. Rams walk as well the majority of Folly Lane is completely pedestrianised. The route through Pages Court is gradually becoming an inviting pedestrian link between The High Street and St Peter’s Road. The sense of cycle routes down the middle of central car park drives are questionable. The general tendency to experiment with establishing safe cycle routes within an already tight urban fabric is on the other hand commendable. |
| 9. Short summary description of area |
| 10. Main issues and recommendations |
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Area 19 does at a first glance appear complete. Closer scrutiny does however reveal considerable scope for enhancement.
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