14, ALBERT TERRACE (See details for further address information) is a Grade II listed building in the Bradford local planning authority area, England. First listed on 7 March 1985. Terrace of workers' houses. 5 related planning applications.
14, ALBERT TERRACE (See details for further address information)
- WRENN ID
- hollow-thatch-mist
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Bradford
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 7 March 1985
- Type
- Terrace of workers' houses
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a row of six identical workers' houses with a lodging house at the north end, now used as a single dwelling. Completed in 1854 as part of the Saltaire model village, the terrace was designed by Lockwood and Mawson for Titus Salt. The houses are constructed of hammer-dressed stone with a Welsh slate roof. Each house is two storeys high and one bay wide, with a simple entrance and a single window on each floor. Some windows have been inserted for bathrooms. Paired stone brackets support the guttering. The end house, number 14, is more elaborately designed to emphasize its visual importance to Albert Terrace. It features a projecting single bay with a round-arched, archivolted opening on the ground floor, a square-headed window on the first floor set within a sill band, and wooden bracket supports for the gutter. It has a hipped roof. The left-hand return front is two bays wide, and the right-hand gable end was originally connected to washhouses, which have since been demolished.
Detailed Attributes
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