1-12, New Walk Terrace is a Grade II listed building in the York local planning authority area, England. First listed on 24 June 1983. Terrace of houses. 9 related planning applications.

1-12, New Walk Terrace

WRENN ID
woven-rubblework-acorn
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
York
Country
England
Date first listed
24 June 1983
Type
Terrace of houses
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: sale history · EPC · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

A terrace of twelve houses built around 1865, located in York. Number 1 is of unpainted stucco, while numbers 2 to 12 are of red brick with white brick arches, sill courses, and stone copings, all topped with slate roofs. The houses are two storeys high with attics. The windows are sash windows without glazing bars. Number 1 features rusticated quoins, a shaped gable with a finial, and a first-floor sill band. It has a timber canted bay window on the ground floor with moulded window openings, a frieze with dentils and raised panels below a hipped roof, as well as two adjacent round-headed windows on the first floor, and a single similar window in the attic. A two-storey bay is set back to the left, featuring a round-headed window above a passageway door with six panels and a plain semicircular overlight. A bay of two storeys plus attic is set back to the right, including a round-headed window at first-floor level and a dormer window with a finial, shaped bargeboards, and a cusped triangular light above a casement with two round-headed lights. The ground floor features a six-panel door (3 over 3) with a plain semicircular overlight. Numbers 2 to 12 are largely identical, exhibiting exposed brickwork and gabled projections mirroring number 1's design, complete with timber canted bay windows on the ground floor, paired round-headed windows on the first floor, and a single round-headed window to the attic. The windows are defined by yellow brick sill bands, and arches with semicircular intrados and two-centred extrados. Each house has a recessed entrance bay to the right, with a six-panel door, a round-headed first-floor window, and a dormer window similar to that on number 1. Brick chimneys, featuring panels and corbelling, are located to the left and right of each house. The interiors have not been inspected.

More on this building

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  • Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
  • Sale history — 11 transactions since 1996
  • Related listed building consents — 9 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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Nearby listed buildings

  1. The Lodge Grade II 43 m
  2. The Lighthorseman Hotel Grade II 47 m
  3. Number 37 and Fulford Grange and the Croft Grade II 95 m
  4. 18, New Walk Terrace Grade II 106 m
  5. Garden Cottage Grade II 120 m
  6. Fishergate House Grade II 164 m
  7. Fulford Conservative Club Grade II 168 m
  8. York Cemetery Railings, Gates, Gate Piers and Terminal Piers on West Boundary Grade II 210 m
  9. Pikeing Well Grade II* 217 m
  10. Fishergate County Primary School Grade II 219 m