Elm Terrace is a Grade II listed building in the Liverpool local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 March 1975. Terraced houses. 2 related planning applications.

Elm Terrace

WRENN ID
hidden-lancet-frost
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Liverpool
Country
England
Date first listed
14 March 1975
Type
Terraced houses
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Elm Terrace is a terrace of four houses, originally designed as a symmetrical composition, built around 1860. Three of the original houses have been demolished. The terrace is constructed of stucco with a slate roof. The houses are two storeys high with an attic storey, each with three bays. Numbers 6 and 7 project slightly forward. The ground floor is treated with channelled rustication, a sill band projects, and there is a top frieze, cornice, and panelled attic storey. Numbers 4 and 5 have tripartite casement windows with consoled mullions and segmental heads on the ground floor, and a projecting porch to the left with a round-arched opening and dentilled cornice. First-floor windows have eared architraves and casements. Number 4 has windows in the attic storey and the lettering “ELM TERRACE”, with a shallow gable above featuring a wreath. The attic storey of number 5 has windows that cut through the cornice. Numbers 6 and 7 have round-headed ground-floor windows and paired porches similar to those of numbers 4 and 5. First-floor windows include architraves, incised friezes, cornices, and architraved central windows with Greek hood mouldings. Attic windows are similar to those of number 5. All windows are casements.

Detailed Attributes

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