1-6, Greenfield Place is a Grade II listed building in the Newcastle upon Tyne local planning authority area, England. First listed on 17 December 1971. Terrace of houses. 18 related planning applications.

1-6, Greenfield Place

WRENN ID
lost-courtyard-quill
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Newcastle upon Tyne
Country
England
Date first listed
17 December 1971
Type
Terrace of houses
Source
Historic England listing

Description

A terrace of six houses at 1-6, Greenfield Place, dating to around 1823. The buildings are constructed of English garden wall bond brick with ashlar dressings and have a Welsh slate roof with flat stone gable copings. They consist of a basement, three storeys, and attics, with each house originally having two bays, except for number 3, which features a third window above a central elliptical stone carriage arch leading to Westgate Road. Steps lead up to six-panelled front doors; some have beaded lower panels, and all are set within doorcases of panelled pilasters and open pediments, topped by patterned fanlights. Windows have wedge stone lintels, and many have French-style openings leading to individual balconies on the first floor. Sashes with projecting stone sills and glazing bars are present elsewhere. Numbers 2 and 6 have ground-floor oriels; number 1 lacks a basement and instead has a ground-floor square projecting bay with stone mullions. Attic dormers are segmental-headed, except for number 2’s right-side dormer, which is square-headed, and number 1 lacks a dormer entirely. Ridge chimneys are present.

Detailed Attributes

Structured analysis including materials, construction techniques, architect attribution, and related listed building consent applications. Sign in or create a free account to view.

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