The present building, inspired by Italian
baroque palaces, was erected after a fire in 1850 by architect
Horace Jones, who much later also designed London's
Tower Bridge. Its then owner
William Crawshay II, an
ironmaster nicknamed the 'Iron King', had the house rebuilt over an iron frame, an early example for this technique. Jones inserted his seven-bay block between two
colonnades of 1840 by John Thistlewood Crew (called J. T. Crews by
Pevsner and English Heritage) which apparently survived the fire. During the First World War, part of the building was used as a convalescent home for wounded soldiers. In 1923,
The Oratory School bought the house and about 120 hectares (300 acres) of the estate's remaining 730 hectares (1,800 acres). The principal of the school was Edward Pereira. The legacy of the estate's days as a school remains with a chapel building and graves for three boys, one of whom died during
World War II in 1940, the other two having died from accident and sickness in the 1920s. Caversham Park had been part of the
ancient parish of Caversham, but was transferred to the neighbouring parish of
Eye and Dunsden in 1911 when the more built up part of Caversham was transferred into the borough of Reading. The residential area of
Caversham Park Village was developed in the 1960s on some of the parkland. The
Local nature reserve Clayfield Copse was part of the land belonging to Caversham Park. Caversham Park and the surrounding development were subsequently transferred from the parish of Eye and Dunsden in Oxfordshire to the borough of Reading in Berkshire in 1977. When approaching Reading via the A3290 (formerly part of the
A329(M) motorway) northbound near the
A4 junction, Caversham Park is a clearly visible
landmark dominating the wooded hill on the opposite side of the Thames.
BBC Monitoring Listening Room, 2000 With the onset of the
Second World War, the British Ministry of Health requisitioned Caversham Park, and initially intended to convert it into a hospital. However, the BBC purchased the property with government grant-in-aid funds and, in the spring of 1943, moved its
Monitoring Service into the premises from
Wood Norton Hall, near
Evesham in Worcestershire. The nearby estate of
Crowsley Park was acquired by the BBC at the same time, to act as the service's receiving station and continues to function in that role. In 1945, 1,000 people were working at the site. In major building works in the 1980s, Norman Lucey, Architect for the BBC Architectural & Civil Engineering Department, restored the interior of the mansion, removed utilitarian brick buildings put up on the east side of the mansion during the war, converted the orangery (then being used as a canteen) into editorial offices, and built a large new west wing to house the listening room. That included a new glazed atrium facing the original stable block. A new east wing was built in the 1990s. A further major building project in 2007–08 saw the west wing converted to house all of Monitoring's operational staff. A large diameter satellite dish was erected in the grounds in the early 1980s. It was later painted green (rather than white) to reduce its obtrusiveness. Shortwave aerials in front of the house were removed. In the 1980s, the formal name of the service was shortened to "BBC Monitoring". In 2016, it was announced that BBC Monitoring would move to London, with the loss of a number of jobs.
Development Approval was granted in 2024 to re-develop the stately home, to become assisted living homes and other types of residential properties. ==References==