. The entrance to
Brasenose Lane is just right of the photo's center. , with
St Mary's behind it. (to the east), looking towards
All Saints. Brasenose faces the west side of
Radcliffe Square opposite the
Radcliffe Camera in the centre of Oxford. The north side is defined by
Brasenose Lane, while the south side reaches the
High Street. To the west is
Lincoln College. At its south-east end, the college is separated from the
University Church by St Mary's Passage. The main entrance of the college can be found on Radcliffe Square. Although not located on
Turl Street, the college has informal links with the three
Turl Street colleges (
Lincoln,
Jesus, and
Exeter). The main college site comprises three
quads, the original Old Quad, a small quad known as the Deer Park, and the large New Quad, as well as collection of smaller houses facing Radcliffe Square and the High Street. The original college buildings comprised a single two-storey quad, incorporating the original kitchen of Brasenose Hall on the south side. In the 17th century a third floor was added to the quad to form the current Old Quad. A separate chapel was also built to the south, connected to the quad by a library built over a
cloister as shown in a 1670 print, thus enclosing the Deer Park. The cloister was for a time the college burial ground, and evidence suggests there were at least 59 people buried there, with the last recorded burial being in 1754. The cloister was filled in to make two or three chambers in around 1807, used as student bedrooms or administrative offices until 1971, when the space was converted into the graduate common room. More recently the graduate common room moved to the Old Quad, and the space, still known as the "Old Cloisters" has been used as a library overspill area, a teaching room and, in 2010–11, as the temporary Senior Common Room. In January 2015, archaeological investigations began as a prelude to a major building project that will restore the stone work and integrate the lower and upper reading rooms, greatly enhancing the college's library provision. The nickname for the Chapel Quad is often thought to be a friendly jibe at
Magdalen College which has a genuine deer park known as The Grove.
Chapel in 1909, with the chapel at left Building began on the
current chapel in 1656, and it replaced an old chapel which was located in a space now occupied by the Senior Common Room. An inscription commemorates this above the door to Staircase IV. Building materials were taken from a disused chapel at the site of
St Mary's College (now Frewin Hall), transported piece by piece by horse-and-cart to Brasenose College. The chapel, a mix of
Gothic and
Baroque styles, features a hanging fan vault ceiling of wood and plaster, and was consecrated in 1666. Various alterations were made to the Chapel after completion. Although repairs were undertaken in the meantime, the interior of the Chapel was renovated (having fallen into a poor state) in 1819, and the exterior beginning in 1841. In 1892–3 a new organ was purchased and fitted, paid for by the then Principal
Charles Buller Heberden; the current organ was installed in 1973, and rebuilt in 2001–2.
Library The current library was begun in 1658 and received its first books in 1664. It replaced a smaller library on Staircase IV, which is now used as a meeting room. The books in the current library were fixed by chains, which were only removed in the 1780s, over a hundred years later. The renovations won an RIBA regional RIBA Conservation award in 2019.
New Quad New Quad was designed by
TG Jackson and finished in 1911, replacing a number of existing buildings. The current site was completed in 1961 with new buildings, used largely for first year undergraduate accommodation, designed by the architects
Powell and
Moya. In 2010 a project was begun to renovate the kitchens, servery, dining hall and some other areas of college. The project included the installation of under floor heating and a new timber floor in the dining hall, new kitchen equipment, a new servery area, additional dining and meeting places, and disabled access to the dining hall. During the project, the Old Quad housed a temporary dining hall and kitchen, while the New Quad was used to store building materials. In recent years the Junior Common Room (JCR) and Bar have also been renovated.
Annexes The college has a large undergraduate annexe situated on
St Michael's Street, developed from
Frewin Hall in the 1940s. Frewin Hall had previously housed a number of tenants from outside the college, including
King Edward VII. Second, Third and Fourth year undergraduates typically choose to live in bedrooms at Frewin. A recent building project at Frewin, aimed to increase the undergraduate bedroom provision and improve facilities, has unearthed some significant archeological finds including a 4,000-year-old prehistoric burial mound, a limestone wall foundation, butchered animal bones, decorated floor tiles, a stone flagon, a bone comb and a medieval long cross silver penny There is also a graduate annexe shared with
St Cross College, which was completed in 1995. The St Cross annexe is laid out in clusters of five bed-sitting rooms, sharing two shower rooms and a kitchen. A second graduate annexe, Hollybush Row, was opened in September 2008 and is located close to the railway station and
Said Business School. It consists of single rooms with en-suite bathrooms and shared kitchens. ==Traditions==