Number 10 And Attached Railings is a Grade II listed building in the Leeds local planning authority area, England. House. 1 related planning application.

Number 10 And Attached Railings

WRENN ID
little-foundation-mint
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Leeds
Country
England
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

This house, now used as offices, dates from around 1790 and was designed by William Lawrance, who was a carpenter, joiner, and architect. It is constructed of red brick in a Flemish bond pattern, with a slate roof and wrought-iron railings. The building is three storeys high with a basement. The front facade is symmetrical, with a central entrance and seven windows on the first floor. To the right is a two-window bay, formerly number 10A, incorporating a restored carriage entrance at ground floor level. The central doorway features wooden fluted columns with plaster Corinthian capitals, a fanlight, and a pediment. The windows are sash windows with stone sills and wedge lintels. The rear of the building includes a bow window on the ground floor and a round-arched stair window.

The interior is believed to contain ground-floor rooms with ornate cornices, a frieze, and a round arch to a rear room. The hall features a pilastered round arch, while the staircase has slender turned balusters, a moulded handrail, a modillion cornice to the ceiling, and a pilastered architrave framing the stair window.

The railings have pointed bud finials to the bars. A wide archway originally provided access to a rear yard containing workshops and warehouses.

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.