Open House Festival

Southall Manor House

civic

00 Architects, 2014

Southall Manor House, The Green, Southall, UB2 4BJ

Southall Manor House is a Grade II* Listed Tudor building - the oldest building in Southall and potentially one of the oldest surviving buildings in West London. The building underwent recent refurbishment, extension and landscaping from 00 Architects. For Open House, the building's heritage will be animated by scents from perfumers 420Tuesdays and Kushbu.

Getting there

Train

Southall

Bus

195, 207, E5, 120

Additional travel info

207 and SL8 (Superloop) buses run to nearby stops on Uxbridge Road, from which the Manor House is a 5-10 minute walk.

Access

Facilities

Accessibility notes

There are no toilet facilities at Southall Manor House - visitors can use facilities at the nearby Dominion Centre (2 min walk).

What you can expect

Visitors will be able to join a guided tour through the scents on display; they are also welcome to explore the rooms themselves.

About

History

Southall Manor House is Southall’s oldest building. It used to tower over the surrounding houses when it was first built, the centre of a small agricultural economy in the countryside, miles from the bustle of London. It is a grade two listed building and one of a very small number of Elizabethan manor houses still surviving.

The manor’s grounds were once extensive and they still include a fountain and a pond. It was built, or possibly rebuilt, in about 1587 for Richard Awsiter, whose family were lords of the manor of Norwood for centuries. The frontage and original chimneys still show off its Tudor heritage but, over the centuries, parts of the building have been added to and altered so much by the house’s procession of wealthy owners that a great deal of the current structure is not original.

The house was purchased by William Welch in 1821. He had already bought the lease to Southall market. The house was in a poor condition so he had it restored, and added a clock tower and a west wing.

Other owners came and went until 1912 when it was sold to Southall-Norwood Urban District Council; it later came under the jurisdiction of Ealing Council in 1965. In 2014 an extensive refurbishment, extension and landscape project was undertaken with 00 Architects.

Online presence

www.aroundealing.com/history/southall-manor-house

Nearby

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