6-12, Monk Bridge Road is a Grade II listed building in the Leeds local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 August 1976. Terrace of houses. 8 related planning applications.

6-12, Monk Bridge Road

WRENN ID
sheer-courtyard-mint
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Leeds
Country
England
Date first listed
5 August 1976
Type
Terrace of houses
Source
Historic England listing

Description

This is a terrace of four houses located on Monk Bridge Road in Far Headingley, Leeds, built around 1860. The houses are constructed of coursed squared gritstone with ashlar detailing, and have slate roofs with stone gable copings. They are two storeys high, with a symmetrical facade featuring five bays and 2:2:4:2:2 first-floor window arrangements. The design is in the Tudor style, notable for projecting gables to the right and left of the centre. Each doorway has a rectangular overlight and a stone cornice supported by console brackets. The ground floor features full-height glazed casement windows, while the first floor has two-light casements with chamfered reveals and dripmoulds. The building is topped with embattled eaves parapets, though the original gable finials are missing. Stone corniced stacks are also present. Inside No. 12, which was previously divided into two flats, the partitions have been removed and original features such as doorways and a straight-flight staircase with turned balusters have been restored. The design shares similarities with houses on Shaw Lane; neither the terrace nor the Shaw Lane houses appears on the 1850 Ordnance Survey map.

Detailed Attributes

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