The Golden Fleece Public House And Attached Outbuilding At Rear is a Grade II listed building in the York local planning authority area, England. First listed on 24 June 1983. Public house. 7 related planning applications.

The Golden Fleece Public House And Attached Outbuilding At Rear

WRENN ID
heavy-eave-grain
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
York
Country
England
Date first listed
24 June 1983
Type
Public house
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

The Golden Fleece public house, dating back to around 1840, is a rebuilding of an earlier structure, with refurbishment work carried out in 1926 by Biscomb and Ferrey. The front of the building is constructed of pink-grey brick in a Flemish bond pattern, with glazed tile and ashlar detailing. The rear is of stretcher bond brickwork. The roof is tiled at the front and pantiled at the rear, with a brick stack. A wing and outbuilding are of orange-red brick in an English garden-wall bond, with orange gauged brick dressings and tiled and pantiled roofs with brick stacks.

The front elevation has three storeys and one window. The ground floor is framed by a keyed elliptical arch of ashlar on tiled pilasters, with moulded ashlar capitals, a deep frieze, and a modillion cornice supported by gableted grooved brackets. A 20th-century boarded door is to the right of a narrow, paired canted bay window with small-pane glazing. The first and second floors have tripartite windows: the first floor has 8:12:8 sashes, while the second floor has squat 3:9:3 sashes, all with painted channelled wedge lintels and painted sills. A moulded mutule eaves cornice has a rainwater head at the right end.

The rear has three storeys and an attic, with a one-window gable wall and a two-storey one-window wing to the right. The ground and first floors have tripartite windows with 2:4:2 sashes, with the ground floor window breaking through into the wing to the left of a doorway with a divided overlight. The second floor has two 12-pane sashes, and the attic a 2-light casement, all with flat arches. The first floor of the wing has a narrow 4-pane sash window. The one-storey, three-bay projecting outbuilding has a tripartite window with 2:4:2 sashes and a cambered arch, along with a 2-light large-pane horizontal sash and a 4-panel door; both have flat arches.

The interior passage incorporates a massive post with a moulded head and a first-floor jetty from the adjacent Herbert House. A keyed round arch recessed within sunk-panelled pilasters with moulded imposts leads to the rear of the passage.

More on this building

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  • Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
  • No sale records on file
  • Related listed building consents — 7 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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