Hallgarth Street Elvet House, a former Crown building (c. 1951) in Hallgarth Street, is currently the base for Durham's
Jobcentre Plus,
Crown Prosecution Service,
Driving Standards Agency and
Tribunals Service. The County Court vacated its purpose-built 1960's annex to Elvet House in October 2008 to relocate alongside the
magistrates' court. The former
priory farm included the former granary called the Tithe Barn, which is grade II* listed; and two former barns, other buildings and a wall which are grade II listed. The Tithe Barn has been dated between 1446 and 1449. Hallgarth House, which is number 77, is grade II listed.
The Victoria, formerly the Victoria Hotel, an inn which is number 86, is grade II listed. Numbers 18, 21 to 32, 54 to 56, 58, 59, 67, 68, 69, 70, 73 and 75 are grade II listed.
Church Street Oswald Court is off Church Street. A
fire ball is reported to have fallen there during a thunderstorm on 13 July 1884.
New Elvet The commercial centre of Elvet is around the junction of New Elvet, Old Elvet and
Elvet Bridge. North of this is a connection to Leazes Road (the A690) via New Elvet Bridge, built in 1967–75. the school of modern languages and cultures, part of the department of English studies,
Dunelm House, home of
Durham Students' Union, is located south of Elvet Riverside and is a grade II listed building built in 1966. It was designed by the same architects as Elvet Riverside, the
Architects' Co-Partnership, but, according to Pevsner, succeeded architecturally where the other building failed. It forms a group with
Ove Arup's
Kingsgate Bridge, a grade I listed pedestrian bridge linking Elvet to the
Durham Peninsula.
Old Elvet Shire Hall, a
grade II listed building, is located on Old Elvet.
Ustinov College operates three student residences (houses 29, 34 and 38) on Old Elvet; The Swan is unnumbered but located immediately beside 38. The local
Masonic Lodge (Universities Lodge 2352) is at 36. The Masonic Hall was built in 1869. The architect was T C Ebdy. The Royal County Hotel is a grade II listed building. It has a staircase traditionally said to have been taken from
Lochleven Castle. Number 32, which has been used as an Adult Education Centre, is a grade II listed building. Elvet Methodist Church was begun in 1902. Number 34 is a grade II listed building. It has been used as the Graduate Society Offices.
Elizabeth Milbanke and
John Bacchus Dykes lived there at different times. The Dun Cow, a pub which is number 37, is a grade II listed building. Numbers 1, 5, 6, 14, 15, 15A, 17, 18, 19, 19½, 20, 25, 26, 26A, 27, 28, 30, 38, 39, 40, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 52, 53, 54, 55 and 55A are grade II listed buildings. Numbers are 47, 48 and 49 are grade II* listed buildings.
Whinney Hill Whinney Hill is a street on a hill of the same name in the Elvet area, that name being derived from the
whin (gorse) shrub that grows there in profusion. The street runs north–south from
Durham Prison and the Durham City
Cricket Grounds, on the banks of the
River Wear, to the roundabout on the
Stockton-on-Tees road near the
Durham University science site. The lower site of
Durham Johnston Comprehensive School was located on it until September 2009 when the school's sites merged. Durham's third passenger railway station, Durham Elvet, opened in 1893 at the north end of Whinney Hill, closing in 1954. Its site is now occupied by Durham Magistrates' Court and the university's Parson's Field buildings. ==References==