Black House, 52 Brierdene Crescent
Black House, 52 Brierdene Crescent
HER Number
15150
District
Sunderland
Site Name
Black House, 52 Brierdene Crescent
Place
Whitley Bay
Map Sheet
NZ37SE
Class
Domestic
Site Type: Broad
House
Site Type: Specific
Detached House
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Mid 20th Century 1933 to 1966
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Description
During the 1960s Ryder and Yates produced a series of buildings for healthcare and welfare. The Social Services Centre in Sunderland, designed in 1982, was, according to Rutter Carroll a radical concept. It was built for the Salvation Army to provide accomodation for women at risk, alcoholics and recidivists. It replaced a Men's Palace near the docks. The new building was H-plan with a courtyard. The central core contained the entrance under a cantilevered concrete canopy and communal facilities, flanked by two wings of accomodation. Rutter Carroll likens the building to a castle, with its high walls and small windows. It even had a cantilevered access 'drawbridge'. The resident's lounge and reception had an oval window. The two wings were of blue brindle brick. The central core was faced in tiles.
Easting
434490
Northing
573930
Grid Reference
NZ434490573930
Sources
Rutter Carroll, 2009, Ryder and Yates - Twentieth Century Architects, p 39 and 124; Evening Chronicle, 12 August 1956, 'Whitley Bay Houses'