• The Elephant Tea Rooms is a Grade II listed building in Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, England.[1] The building was constructed from 1872 to 1877 by Henry...
  • The Elephant Tea Rooms is a Grade II listed building in Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, England.
  • But Sunderland too has some fine examples of this kind of architecture, which brings us to what is known as the Elephant Tea Rooms.
  • Elephant Tea Rooms is located on a critical junction in the city centre of Sunderland. Grade II listed, the building was designed by architect Frank Caws in a...
  • Elephant Tea Rooms has been part of the Sunderland story since the 1870s, when it was designed by Frank Caws for tea merchant Ronald Grimshaw.
  • ...gargoyles which adorn the towered and turreted frontage of what in 1980 was Williams and Glyn’s Bank, but was also known as the Elephant Tea Rooms.
  • Councillor Graeme Miller, leader of Sunderland City Council, said: "It's fantastic to see the restoration of the Elephant Tea Rooms continuing to move forward.
  • A heritage structure, Elephant Tea Rooms is a part of the Sunderland region of Tyne and Wear.
  • The Elephant Tea Rooms. Good to have a first look around this building this week – not often we get a building with elephants and dragons here in the North East!
  • The Elephant Tea Rooms were designed by Frank Caws and built by Henry Hooper for tea merchant Ronald Grimshaw.
  • Work to restore the iconic Elephant Tea Rooms in Sunderland is now complete and Sunderland City Council will soon market the building to commence its...
  • The 'secret staircase' uncovered in Sunderland's Elephant Tea Rooms as renovation work goes on. ... Elephant Tea Rooms.
  • Accurately recrafted trunks have been reinstated on the three elephants that adorn the façade and give the Grade II listed Elephant Tea Rooms its name.