16, Grosvenor Street is a Grade II listed building in the Cheshire West and Chester local planning authority area, England. First listed on 10 January 1972. Town house. 6 related planning applications.
16, Grosvenor Street
- WRENN ID
- ruined-lantern-jet
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cheshire West and Chester
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 10 January 1972
- Type
- Town house
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
16 Grosvenor Street is an early 19th-century townhouse, now combined with No. 14 Grosvenor Street and numbers 1, 3, and 5 Cuppin Street to form part of a restaurant. The front is constructed of brown brick in Flemish bond, topped with a grey slate roof, hipped to the north. The building is three storeys high and one bay wide.
A rebuilt brick and stone staircase leads to the front door, which is of six flush panels set within a case featuring simple pilasters, a frieze, and a cornice hood. Each storey has a single recessed sash window. The first and second storeys have 16-pane sashes with painted stone sills and wedge lintels with cambered soffits. The third-floor window has a 12-pane sash with unequal leaves and the same window dressings. A plain painted stone eaves coping and a south gable chimney complete the exterior. The detailing is comparable to numbers 1-5 (odd) Cuppin Street and 1-7 (odd) Union Place, suggesting they were part of the same development. The interior has not been inspected.
Detailed Attributes
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