5-10, BATH TERRACE is a Grade II listed building in the Northumberland local planning authority area, England. First listed on 6 November 1981. Terrace. 6 related planning applications.
5-10, BATH TERRACE
- WRENN ID
- dark-attic-bramble
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Northumberland
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 6 November 1981
- Type
- Terrace
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a terrace of six houses, numbers 5 to 10, built around 1790. The terrace is constructed of brick in English Garden Wall Bond, with stone dressings, and has a Welsh slate roof, except for the 20th-century tile roof on number 5. The houses are two storeys high with attics, and each has two bays, except for number 7, which has three. The front doors are mostly four-panel doors, although some have been replaced; number 10 has a three-pane overlight, while the others have plain overlights. The doors are set within renewed wooden doorcases, some with pediments. Most of the windows are four-pane sashes with wedge lintels. The attics have gabled dormers, with two dormers on number 7. These dormers have round-arched four-pane sashes, shaped bargeboards, and moulded finials. There are ridge stacks on the roof. The rear elevation mirrors the front, with similar dormers. Number 7 has a contemporary wing with a hipped roof. Inside number 10, a dog-leg staircase features stick balusters, a moulded newel, and a ramped moulded handrail, along with folding panelled shutters. The interiors of the other houses are believed to have been altered to varying degrees.
Detailed Attributes
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