83, Micklegate is a Grade II listed building in the York local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 June 1954. House. 1 related planning application.

83, Micklegate

WRENN ID
errant-gutter-brook
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
York
Country
England
Date first listed
14 June 1954
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

No. 83 Micklegate is a house dating from around 1730, featuring an early 19th-century doorcase and bow window, along with a 20th-century extension at the rear. The building is constructed of red brick in random bond and has a brick dentil eaves cornice. It has a pantile roof with brick kneelers and a brick parapet on the left gable, and a left brick stack.

The house is two storeys with an attic and has a one-window front. There is a step up to the doorcase, which is supported by fluted half-columns with floriate imposts and has a moulded cornice hood on acanthus brackets. The door consists of six raised and fielded panels beneath a divided fanlight set in a round-arched architrave. To the left, there is a bow window that is curved in plan, featuring a tripartite window with a 12-pane sash in the centre, framed with a fluted frieze and plain cornice. The first-floor window is also a 12-pane sash, and the attic has a flat dormer with a small 12-pane sash. There are three-course raised brick bands at both the first floor and eaves levels, which return on the left gable wall.

On the left return, the house is two storeys with an attic and has two windows. There are two segment-arched 12-pane sashes on both the ground and first floors, while the attic features a partly blind Venetian window formed from a round-headed sunk panel between two small 12-pane sashes.

Inside, there is a newel stair leading from the ground floor to the attic. The ground floor includes a plain round arch on imposts that leads to the rear of the entrance passage. The front room has a plain stone fireplace with a cast-iron basket grate flanked by anthemion side pieces. On the first floor, the front room features a chimneypiece with fluted jambs, a frieze with paterae and a plain shelf, along with a hob grate with floral drops on the side pieces, and a moulded dado rail. In the attic, both rooms retain plank doors with pegged-on panels, hung on H hinges.

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Nearby listed buildings

  1. 85, 87 and 89, Micklegate Grade II* 12 m
  2. 91 and 93, Micklegate Grade II 24 m
  3. 98, Micklegate Grade II 27 m
  4. Number 92 and Railings Attached at Front and Rear Grade II* 28 m
  5. The Nags Head Public House Grade II 30 m
  6. Micklegate Post Office Grade II 31 m
  7. The Falcon Inn (Number 94) Grade II 31 m
  8. 102 and 104, Micklegate Grade II* 33 m
  9. Micklegate House and Attached Railings and Lamp Brackets Grade I 35 m
  10. Number 5 and Attached Railings and Gates Grade II 43 m