Skip to content
The Great Britain Guide

Theatres · East of England

St George's Theatre

♿ Wheelchair: limited

St George's Theatre — Grade I listed building-listed theatre in england-east, United Kingdom.

148 King Street - geograph.org.uk - 5185561

Michael Dibb — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
2 h–3 h
  • Limited wheelchair access

About

St George's Theatre is a Grade I listed building-listed theatre in england-east, United Kingdom, registered on the National Heritage List for England (NHLE entry 1245919). Listed status protects buildings and structures of special architectural or historic interest. See the linked Wikipedia article for further details.

Photo gallery

Heritage listing

Details GREAT YARMOUTH TG5207SE ST GEORGE'S PLAIN 839-1/16/181 (North East side) 27/06/53 St George's Theatre (Formerly Listed as: KING STREET (East side) Former Church of St George) GV I Church, now theatre. Built 1714 as a chapel of ease to St Nicholas by John Price of Wandsworth. Redundant in 1959, restored 1974 and opened as a theatre 1979. The ground plan is based on St Clement Danes, London. Red brick with ashlar dressings on a stone plinth course. The brick is laid in Flemish bond but is of header bond in the quadrants. Copper roof. EXTERIOR: 2 storeys; 4-window range. The north and south sides are of 4 bays each, with giant pilasters supporting a Doric block entablature below a rebuilt parapet. 8/8 lower sashes and 12/12 upper ones, all round-headed. There is one 6-panelled door to each front, requiring the shortening of one window. The east and west ends are joined to the sides by means of double quadrants, each of which has a pair of sashes as before set within a broad ashlar band. One quadrant bay on north and south sides has a pedimented doorway. The church is entered from the west through a double-leaf door under a pediment. Pilasters rise up either side to a broken pediment containing a round-headed sash with glazing bars. Above the parapet is a tower of square section lit through a small sash to the west and with a clock face under a pediment to the north and south. There is a low open balustrade and then an open cupola with paired columns to the projections. On top of this is a polygonal lantern under an ogeed dome. Ball finial and weathervane. The east end has the same double quadrants as the west except they do not have doorways. The upper east window is the only one to retain C18 glazing bars, though not of 1718. The east end has a pair of giant Corin

From the Historic England List Entry under OGL v3.

Place summary

St George's Theatre is a Grade I listed building located in the East of England. This historic theatre is notable for its architectural significance and preservation.

AI-generated from the structured facts on this page (operator, designation, listing, era). Not a substitute for visiting.

Coordinates
52.6051, 1.7293
County
Norfolk
Parish
Great Yarmouth, unparished area
Postcode
NR30 2PG
Parliamentary constituency
Great Yarmouth

Sources

Other places nearby

Loading nearby places…

Nearby

More theatres in this region

Frequently asked questions

Where is St George's Theatre?
St George's Theatre is in Norfolk, East of England, United Kingdom (postcode NR30 2PG), in the parish of Great Yarmouth, unparished area.
Is St George's Theatre a listed building?
St George's Theatre is officially recognised as Grade I listed building listed.
How do I get to St George's Theatre?
Drivers can navigate to postcode NR30 2PG. It sits within the Great Yarmouth parliamentary constituency.