Landmark estate pub, built in 1936, with art deco cornices. It was a leading rock venue in the 1970s where bands such as Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Queen and Status Quo performed.
The bars within the main area of the pub are closed while undergoing a refurbishment that is due to be completed by the end of October 2024. However, a bar with pool tables and a dartboard at the rear of the pub adjoining the events hall remains open.
Historic Interest
Historic Music pub
One star - A pub interior of special national historic interest
Listed status: Not listed
This daunting pub near the western edge of the vast Becontree Estate was built in 1936. It has a most unusual design, the work of specialist pub architect, Alfred W Blomfield. As the name suggests the ground plan is round and on top of this there sits a T-shaped upper storey with a bulky square tower in the centre. This is a classic example of the large inter-war pubs that went up on housing estates to serve great swathes of housing and provide extensive facilities – and not just for alcohol drinkers. This one had a tea room and a wing containing an indoor bowling green. Blomfield also provided a huge oval lounge at the rear and this still survives but with a cut-through to the adjacent room at the front. This in turn is separated by a wall from the rest of the pub where one can still get some sense of the original spaces. The fittings, apart from some sub-Art Deco wall panelling, are largely replacements.
Roundhouse, Dagenham