22 Goodramgate, buildings attached at rear and 8 Ogleforth is a Grade II listed building in the York local planning authority area, England. First listed on 24 June 1983. A C19 House, brewery, shop, warehousing. 1 related planning application.
22 Goodramgate, buildings attached at rear and 8 Ogleforth
- WRENN ID
- graven-gable-hemlock
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- York
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 24 June 1983
- Type
- House, brewery, shop, warehousing
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This property comprises a house, brewhouse, stores, and offices, now used as a shop and warehousing facility. The main house dates to the late 17th century and was refronted in the 19th century, with later alterations. The front of the house is stuccoed, featuring a timber cornice, while the left return has orange brick, now rendered. A gabled dormer with paired four-pane sash windows and pierced scalloped bargeboards sits atop a slate mansard roof; a brick stack is also visible.
The exterior of the house features a three-story, two-window front. It has a plate glass shop window and door, with one-pane sash windows on the first and second floors, all with painted sills.
The brewery buildings, constructed in various dates throughout the 19th century, incorporate a mix of English garden-wall and stretcher brick bonds, and have pantile roofs and brick stacks. The ranges fronting Ogleforth vary in height, from two to four stories. A general characteristic of the four-story block is the presence of 15/15-pane pivoting windows with cambered arches and painted sills. The top storey is distinguished by paired board lifting doors above a lucam, and squat 10/10-pane windows. Other ranges have twelve-pane sash windows, a louvred opening, a cambered arch, and a board stable door with a timber lintel. A projecting three-story block to the right has board lifting doors, 15/15-pane windows, and slatted openings on the top floor.
No. 8 Ogleforth, dating to approximately 1820, has been altered later. It is constructed with orange-cream brick in an English garden-wall bond, featuring a pantile roof and modillioned guttering. Its three-story, three-bay front has an entrance on the ground floor accessible from St William's College, College Street. A stone outside stair with stick railings leads to a first-floor walkway and a central door consisting of six incised panels with a small-pane overlight. The door is set within a full-height square-headed recess, with similar shallow recesses on either side, exhibiting round arches on the first floor and square heads on the second. The left return features a lunette with a nine-pane centre sash on the third floor, while the right return displays a three-story, three-window gable wall. Some original 15/15-pane windows with original glass remain, while others have been replaced with six-pane lights.
The interior has not been inspected, but records indicate that No. 22 Goodramgate retains an original staircase above the first floor, characterized by bulbous turned balusters, square newels, and a moulded handrail.
Detailed Attributes
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