1-17, Framlington Place is a Grade II listed building in the Newcastle upon Tyne local planning authority area, England. First listed on 30 March 1987. Terrace of houses. 8 related planning applications.
1-17, Framlington Place
- WRENN ID
- moated-render-holly
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Newcastle upon Tyne
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 30 March 1987
- Type
- Terrace of houses
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a terrace of twelve houses, numbered 1 to 17, built around 1850 in Newcastle upon Tyne. The houses are constructed of grey brick with an ashlar basement, plinth, and decorative stone dressings. They have Welsh slate roofs. Numbers 8, 9, and 10 have projecting frontages marked by quoins. Basements are present on the right side of the terrace, covering numbers 1 to 10. The houses are generally three stories high, although number 8 has a four-story canted bay window. The number of bays in each house varies from three to six.
Access is gained via steps, more numerous on the right-hand side, leading to four-panelled doors with overlights set in raised stone surrounds featuring prominent cornices. A Tuscan porch shelters the entrance to number 16. The windows are margined sash windows, with aprons on the ground floor and projecting stone sills. Canted bay windows are present at numbers 16 and 17 at the left end of the terrace. A set-back open porch provides access to number 1, while number 17 has an entrance in the three-bay left return. Sill bands run along the first and second floors, and a dentilled cornice sits beneath the roofline. The low-pitched, hipped roof is punctuated by ashlar-corniced brick chimneys. Cast iron railings line the steps of numbers 1 to 13, with tied diagonal bars at numbers 1 to 7 and scrolled balusters at numbers 8 to 13.
Detailed Attributes
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