Right Hand Part Of Crown Hotel is a Grade II listed building in the Leeds local planning authority area, England. First listed on 8 February 1988. Public house. 9 related planning applications.

Right Hand Part Of Crown Hotel

WRENN ID
shifting-landing-gorse
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Leeds
Country
England
Date first listed
8 February 1988
Type
Public house
Source
Historic England listing

Description

This is the right-hand section of the Crown Hotel, a public house dating from the early 19th century. It is constructed of ashlar magnesian limestone with a Welsh slate roof. The building is two storeys and an attic, with two bays. The front elevation features a panelled door with a radial glazed overlight on the left side, and a two-storey bow window to the right. The bow window contains sashes with 4, 12, and 4 panes, featuring projecting stone sills and chamfered stone mullions. Above the door is a later 4-pane sash window with a projecting sill and flat arch. The eaves have wooden cornices with paired brackets to form a gutter. A tall stack rises from the left roof slope, and there is a cement-rendered stack on the right end. The rear elevation has two sash windows with glazing bars to the first floor, and a graduated slate roof. The right return shows a round-headed stair window with a sash window containing glazing bars, and a smaller round-headed attic window. Numerous inserted windows are also present. Originally a freestanding structure, the section described was later joined to an addition on the left, which is not considered to be of special architectural interest.

Detailed Attributes

Structured analysis including materials, construction techniques, architect attribution, and related listed building consent applications. Sign in or create a free account to view.

Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.