1, 2 And 3, Witham Place is a Grade II listed building in the Boston local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 February 1975. Residential. 1 related planning application.
1, 2 And 3, Witham Place
- WRENN ID
- ghost-floor-autumn
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Boston
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 14 February 1975
- Type
- Residential
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
A terrace of three houses, built around 1790, with minor alterations in the 19th and 20th centuries. The houses are constructed of red brick in a Flemish bond pattern, with a Westmorland slate roof concealed behind a tall parapet featuring flat stone coping. Three ridge stacks are present. The design incorporates a valley gutter between each building and a sloping roof to the rear.
The front elevation is three storeys and six bays, arranged in a 2:2:2 pattern, with a first-floor brick band. Numbers 1 and 2 each have a six-panelled door to the right, protected by a panelled ingoes, an overlight, and a narrow pilastered doorcase topped with a small pediment and finely dentilled cornice. To the left of each door is a margin light sash window. Number 3 has two 20th-century margin light sashes where a shop front once stood. The first floor features six margin light sash windows, and the second floor has six smaller, similar windows. All windows are set within flat, wedge-rubbed brick arches.
The return side of Number 3, facing Witham Street, has a side entrance door in a pedimented surround similar to those on the front, and a plain sash window with a brick segmental head. At the rear, there are single-storey pantiled extensions.
The interiors retain narrow stick baluster staircases and some panelled doors.
Detailed Attributes
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