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
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