15, Foregate Street is a Grade II listed building in the Cheshire West and Chester local planning authority area, England. First listed on 27 October 1989. Bank. 12 related planning applications.

15, Foregate Street

WRENN ID
brooding-sentry-dale
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cheshire West and Chester
Country
England
Date first listed
27 October 1989
Type
Bank
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Bank. 1921. Designed by Francis Jones for the Manchester and Liverpool District Bank Ltd. Extended in 1964 by Saxon Smith and Partners and now occupied by the Royal Bank of Scotland. Steel frame clad in sandstone and timber frame with plaster panels; Westmorland green slate roof. An accomplished late example of the Vernacular Revival.

The building comprises a one-bay south front to Foregate Street and the south bay of a five-bay east front to Frodsham Street containing a lobby to the banking hall with offices above, both of three storeys plus an attic. The east front faces the tall banking hall and has one full storey of offices and an attic above. The timber frame is jettied at floor and sill levels of the second storey of the south bay and at sill level of the third storey of all bays. All gables have coved jetties. The principal posts, bressumers, tie-beams, bargeboards, mullions and transoms are carved or moulded.

The front to Foregate Street has a first storey of rock-faced squared snecked red sandstone with a nailed boarded oak door of three leaves to the east, and two fixed oak mullioned and transomed windows of four lights. The upper storeys are timber-framed. The second storey has a row of twelve arched panels beneath continuous leaded glazing comprising three mullioned and transomed casements of four lights. The third storey has fenestration similar to the second storey above a row of twelve panels with quadrant braces. The gabled attic has a shallow canted oriel of five lights with a jetty above and small framing, bargeboards, a rainwater head west of the gable dated 1921, and an ornate rainwater head to the east.

The front to Frodsham Street has a plinth of rock-faced squared snecked sandstone rubble, an entrance-and-stair bay of sandstone ashlar with two timber-framed gabled bays to the south and one to the north with a sandstone ashlar extension beyond dated 1964. The southernmost bay has two three-light mullioned and transomed windows separated by a principal post to the first storey, five-light mullioned and transomed canted oriels to the second and third storeys and a five-light casement to the attic, with features similar to those on the front to Foregate Street. The rainwater head north of the gable is dated 1921. The bay to each side of the entrance has a tall window of four pairs of lights with two transoms, with a column of seven quadrant-braced panels to each side. The second storey of each bay has mullioned and transomed casements of two, four and two lights above a row of ten quadrant-braced panels. Each gable has a four-light mullioned and transomed casement in small framing. The entrance-and-stair bay has a nailed boarded doorway in a recessed Tudor arch with a tall recessed stair window above with mullion and two transoms. The roof descends to eaves between the adjacent gables. The rainwater head south of the stair is dated 1921. The added northernmost bay of four storeys, labelled Bank Chambers, has boarded double doors in a Tudor arch opening and a three-light mullioned window with a recessed panel beneath the upper storey, a moulded string course raised above the uppermost window, a parapet with moulded cap, and two rainwater heads dated 1964. The rear is of brick with no visible features of special interest.

The lobby from Foregate Street has double inner doors of oak with leaded glazing. The entrance from Frodsham Street is blocked. The banking hall, altered in 1964 and 1984, has panelling, a west gallery with rail on turned balusters and a ceiling with oak-cased primary and secondary beams and plaster panels.

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.

Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.