13, Coney Street is a Grade II listed building in the York local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 June 1954. House. 4 related planning applications.

13, Coney Street

WRENN ID
mired-stronghold-rook
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
York
Country
England
Date first listed
14 June 1954
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

This is a mid-18th century house, with early 19th century alterations, and a ground floor rebuilt in the 20th century. The front is built of orange-grey mottled brick in a Flemish bond, with a pink-grey mottled brick ground floor, a timber eaves cornice, red brick dressings, a slate and pantile double span roof, and a brick stack. The front elevation is three storeys high with a single window. An entrance is located in the right return. It features a two-storey bow window on the ground and first floors, with canted single-pane sash windows and moulded cornices. The second-floor window is a four-pane sash beneath a brick arch partially hidden by a paired modillion eaves cornice. A four-course raised brick band runs to the second floor, returning at the right end. The right return is three storeys with gabled attics and a three-bay front. A six-panel door with a cross-glazed overlight is set in a doorcase of engaged fluted columns with acanthus capitals, a plain frieze with latticed blocks, and a plain cornice hood. Blocked windows flank the door, each with a segmental arch. The first floor has a twelve-pane sash window aligned centrally, between blocked outer windows, all within brick quoined surrounds and flat arches of gauged brick. The second floor has a two-by-six-pane horizontal sliding sash in a quoined surround with a segmental arch. The left attic has a two-light casement window, while the right has a tall blocked opening. A raised first-floor band runs across a projecting wing to the rear. This wing has a four-pane sash window on the ground floor, and twelve-pane sashes on the first and second floors, with a coved eaves cornice. The first-floor front room has an early 19th century cornice and fielded panel doors within early 19th century architraves.

Detailed Attributes

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