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Report - - Dee House (Chester, Mar, 2019) | Other Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Dee House (Chester, Mar, 2019)

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urbanchemist

28DL Regular User
Regular User
History adapted from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dee_House.
Dee House was built in about 1730 as a town house for John Comberbach, a former mayor of Chester.
It continued in use as a private residence until about 1850, when it was sold to the Church of England.
In 1854 it passed to the Faithful Companions of Jesus, a religious institute of the Roman Catholic Church, who used it as a convent school.
They added a wing to the east which incorporated in its ground floor a chapel designed by Edmund Kirby (a Liverpool architect who specialised in churches).
The chapel is in Gothic Revival style, in contrast to the central portion of the building in Georgian style.
A west wing in Neo-Georgian style was added in about 1900 (the right hand part with four windows).
In 1925 the building was taken over by the Ursulines, another religious institute.
In the early 1970s the convent closed and the building was used as offices by British Telecom. They vacated the building in the early 1990s and it has been empty since.

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This is one of the most obvious bits of dereliction in Chester, overlooking the Roman amphitheatre.
Although it doesn’t seem too bad from the outside, once inside, parts of the older sections turned out to be in dreadful shape, with bulging crooked walls and ceilings held up by internal scaffolding.
Nevertheless, although the place has had many uses over the years, there are still quite a few original features left.
These are detailed at great length in a Historic England report from 2005/6, which I wish I had found before I went in.

Pictures go from the ground floor up - there is a partial basement, but not much of interest down there.

Entrance hall fanlight and oddly serpentine main hall stairs.

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A drawing room - there is apparently some old painted-on imitation panelling in here although I didn’t notice it at the time.

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Two areas of dereliction.

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One of the modernised ground floor office rooms in another extension to the right of the main building.

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Views of the chapel from a doorway in a partition which has been built across the middle.

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What the chapel originally looked like.

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Up to the first floor and some of the scaffolding.

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More office-type rooms.

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A first floor bedroom - much of the woodwork, if not the wallpaper, is original.

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Other wallpapers from various locations.

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The room above the chapel, originally a classroom, but used as an office by BT.

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Some bedrooms on the top floor.

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The third floor of the chapel extension, which was originally a dormitory.

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The building is owned by the council and there is a long-running debate over whether it should be de-listed and demolished or renovated.
 

Redavni Ecaps

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
Great report but you missed a major part of this explore!

I did this place about 14 years ago, on the bottom floor there is a whole room full from top to bottom of shelves stacked with boxes.
In the boxes are all the artifacts from when they excavated the amplitheater.
 

urbanchemist

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Great report but you missed a major part of this explore!

I did this place about 14 years ago, on the bottom floor there is a whole room full from top to bottom of shelves stacked with boxes.
In the boxes are all the artifacts from when they excavated the amplitheater.

Interesting - can you remember whereabouts? I didn't see anything like that.
 

Redavni Ecaps

28DL Full Member
28DL Full Member
We went of a night, entered from the back of the building so the room would of been on the right.
That was the last room we went in before leaving and the only room which had pir sensors.
I need to find my hard drive with all my old photos on.
It looks a lot different in the daytime but not much has changed, that classroom is exactly as it was back then.
 

Zerowhite

28DL Member
28DL Member
It was my school throughout the 1960s when it looked so different, and smelt of polish - and the chapel smelt of incense. I’m sad to see the state it’s in now. I visited Chester at the time BT took it over and had a quick snoop around outside, and have always wondered what the inside looked like once the building closed. So thank you for the pictures. Incidentally, we used to say that the bumps in the bannisters were to stop us sliding down - probably not true!
 

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