St Jude's Church, Kensington
St Jude's Church, Courtfield Gardens | |
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South elevation of St Jude's Church | |
Denomination | Church of England |
History | |
Dedication | Saint Jude |
Architecture | |
Architect(s) |
George Godwin & Henry Godwin, HMDW Architects |
Administration | |
Diocese | Kensington |
St Jude's Church, Courtfield Gardens, Kensington, London, was designed by architects George Godwin and Henry Godwin, and built between 1867-70; the tower and spire were constructed in 1879. It was built on the northern portion of Captain Robert Gunter's estate. The project was overseen by Reverend J. A. Aston, and financed by John Derby Allcroft, a wealthy glove manufacturer.[1] The construction, not including the tower, pulpit, font and organ cost £11,300, and was undertaken by Myers & Sons.[2]
Original exterior
St Jude's Church is surrounded by Courtfield Gardens, Collingham Road, and Courtfield Road. Adjacent to the north is the Vicarage (built in 1874), also designed by George and Henry Godwin.[3]
The building was realised in a Gothic Revival style. It was built of Kentish ragstone, with ashlar stone dressings and has steeply pitched gabled roofs, of more than forty roof slopes. The roof is slate, in varying coloured bands of pale and dark grey tiles.
Original interior
The nave has galleries at a first floor level, on the north, west and south sides. It is unusually wide for its length, and has banded iron columns with sheet copper crafted capitals. The brickwork contains elaborate patterns of buff, red and black bricks, and murals in roundels above the column capitals, and in the reveal of the chancel arch, painted by Edward Frampton. The nave has diagonally-set quarry tiles, and the chancel is Minton tiles.[1]
The chancel has several interesting features: the reredos is alabaster, with mosaics by Antonio Salviati, and sculpted figures of St Jude, St Peter, and St Augustine. The pulpit is marble and alabaster, and the lectern is brass. These were designed by Thomas Earp and crafted by Edward Frampton.[3]
Use of the building
The Reverend Robert William Forest D.D. was the first incumbent of the Church, and later was Dean of Worcester.[4] The building was designed for a capacity of up to 1600 during services by utilising the nave, narthex, and galleries.[2]
The building was listed Grade II* on 7 November 1984.[1]
In 2006, the parishioners of St Jude's Church were absorbed into St Mary the Boltons, doubling its congregation.[4]
Building project
Under the leadership of HTB, and designed by HMDW Architects, work began in 2010 to transform the building into a theological College. The roof was entirely replaced, with like-for-like slates. The newly excavated undercroft houses two lecture rooms, offices and amenities. On the ground floor, the nave is being renovated, and a café is being installed in the narthex. A new first floor, at the same level of the galleries, will provide a library above the Narthex Café. The western exterior entrance stonework is being cleaned, and the interior white paint, applied to cover the brickwork, is being removed. Archived memorials have been reinstated.[5]
Building in use
The building is occupied by St Mellitus College, led by the Dean, Graham Tomlin. The College runs ordination and theology courses.[6] It is also occupied by a homeless charity, the Earl's Court Project.
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Nave, looking west, before building work began, 2009
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North East exterior, before building work began, note the slate banding
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After redevelopment by HMDW Architects. External view from the garden of the new roof
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Cafe view east
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Nave view east, towards the Pulpit, the North Gallery and Offices under the Gallery
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Nave view west, towards the Cafe, with Library at first floor level. The Timber Gallery balustrade surrounds the Nave at first floor level
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Listed Buildings Online: 'Church of St Jude' Accessed 03.07.2009
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 May 13th, 1871 'The Builder'
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Bridget Cherry & Nikolaus Pevsner: 'The Buildings of England – London 3: North West' pp458-9
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 St Mary the Boltons Website
- ↑ Information on HMDW Architects Website
- ↑ St Mellitus Theological College website
External links
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