Church Terrace is a Grade II listed building in the Calderdale local planning authority area, England. First listed on 15 November 1966. House.

Church Terrace

WRENN ID
worn-nave-dawn
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Calderdale
Country
England
Date first listed
15 November 1966
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Church Terrace is a house from the second half of the 17th century, now divided into three separate residences. It was originally listed as Town Farm in 1966. The building is constructed from coursed squared stone and topped with a stone slate roof, featuring an L-shaped plan. It has two storeys and three bays, with a wing that projects from the front left.

The main range consists of three cottages, each with double-chamfered mullion windows in the two left-hand bays. Each cottage has a 20th-century board door set within a plain stone surround from the 19th century. Cottage No. 2, on the left, has a door inserted at the right end of a window, leaving a five-light window above. Cottage No. 3, in the centre, features a door to the left of a six-light window, with a five-light window above it. Cottage No. 4, on the right and now part of No. 3, has a straight joint and a change in masonry on the first floor at the junction with No. 3. It includes a door next to a three-light 20th-century flat-faced mullion window, with two two-light single-chamfered mullion windows above.

The wing, designated as No. 1, has a gable with a plain stone surround and a doorway to the left of a 20th-century lean-to garage, which is not of special interest. To the right, there is a two-light flat-faced mullion window above, along with a gable stack. The right return features quoins on the left, a blocked quoined doorway on the right with a wooden lintel, and a blocked window on the left where the wall is made of thinly-coursed rubble.

At the rear, there are two four-light windows on the ground floor for Nos. 2 and 3, while No. 4 has a three-light chamfered mullion window on the left. The right return shows a straight joint indicating a rearward extension and roof heightening, with a blocked two-light flat-faced mullion window on the right and a two-light chamfered window above it, where the mullion has been removed. The left return has double-chamfered mullion windows on the ground floor, including blocked windows of 2, 3, 3, and 4 lights, with a later two-light flat-faced mullion window positioned between the last two.

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