Waters Green Brockenhurst leaflet

Summary

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Explains the Waters Green Conservation Area on the northern edge of Brockenhurst and how conservation area status may affect residents. The area includes Waters Green and a mix of 18th and 19th century homes set within an older pattern of fields and cottages. An unfenced Forest lawn with common grazing rights links Waters Green to Black Knowl. Its character comes from narrow lanes lined with small cottages, Victorian villas, terraces and semi-detached houses, despite only two listed buildings. Key landscape features include the stream called The Weir and its ford, which form an attractive setting and a boundary with the open Forest. Notable buildings on Lyndhurst Road include Bridge Farm (Grade II), Bridge House and Careys Manor Hotel, enhanced by mature trees. The leaflet highlights the importance of preserving traditional details and surfaces, and notes concerns about loss of original features through alterations.

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This leaflet explains what a conservation area is and how it may affect you. It shows the boundary of one of the 33 conservation areas and points out some of the features which make it special.

Waters Green

Brockenhurst

Waters Green conservation area comprises the green itself and a range of traditional 18th and 19th century dwellings built within the boundaries of an earlier layout of fields and scattered cottages on the northern edge of Brockenhurst village. In the centre unfenced Forest lawn with common grazing rights extends from Waters Green north west into the adjacent open Forest area of Black Knowl. Although only two buildings are listed the mixture of small cottages, Victorian villas, terraces and semi-detached houses along narrow lanes gives the area its very distinctive character.

To the west a stream, The Weir, with its ford is an attractive backdrop to Butts Lawn and forms a natural physical boundary with the open Forest in the north east.

Careys Manor (photograph)
Careys Manor

An important feature is the consistent style of detailing and type of building material used in the main building period, of about 10 years. Date stones appear on several buildings, eg in Park Close 1896 and Ringwood Terrace 1897. In 1817 the Rev Henry Comyn recorded 22 inmates in the Workhouse - now converted to three cottages on the south side of the Green.

Along Lyndhurst Road three substantial buildings, Bridge Farm (Grade II), Bridge House and Careys Manor Hotel have considerable architectural merit and along with the surrounding mature trees make a major contribution to the character of Waters Green. The appearance of the lanes themselves is important with the lack of hard kerbs and limited hardstanding - the grass must be protected from excessive wear from car parking. Unfortunately many buildings are losing original detailing, for example, through the replacement of windows and doors and painting of exterior brickwork which is reducing the special architectural and historic character of the area.

Waters Green beside Lyndhurst Road (photograph)
Waters Green beside Lyndhurst Road

Keep your distance from the animals and don't feed or pet them - you may be fined.

Keep your distance from the animals and don't feed or pet them - you may be fined.

Keep your distance from the animals and don't feed or pet them - you may be fined.

Keep your distance from the animals and don't feed or pet them - you may be fined.