Albion Place is a Grade II listed building in the Doncaster local planning authority area, England. First listed on 23 April 1981. Terrace of houses. 2 related planning applications.

Albion Place

WRENN ID
unlit-groin-mist
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Doncaster
Country
England
Date first listed
23 April 1981
Type
Terrace of houses
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Albion Place is a terrace of six houses, some now offices, built in the early 19th century with minor alterations later. The houses are constructed of stucco with painted stone dressings, and have concrete tile roofs, except for numbers 13 and 14, which have tarred slate roofs. Each house is three storeys and two bays, arranged in pairs that step down towards number 14. Each house has a six-panel door beneath a traceried fanlight, set within a doorcase featuring panelled pilasters and a dentilled cornice. The doorcases to numbers 9, 10, 11, 12, and 13 are paired, with doors positioned on the left side at a higher level. Number 14’s doorcase is situated on the right return wall; the door to number 9 is on the far left. The ground floor windows are 12-pane sashes, except for number 14, which has plate-glass sashes. There’s a continuous sill band to the first floor. Above that are two full-height, unequally hung 15-pane sashes to the first floor, each with small bracketed filigree ironwork balconies. A further pair of 12-pane sashes are above. Ground and second floor windows have projecting sills. Timber cornices are also present. Each pair of houses has a rendered central brick ridge stack. A gabled late 19th-century roof dormer is visible on number 13. The right return wall of number 14 has three blind windows to the first and second floors, with similar openings to either side of the door.

Detailed Attributes

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