Number 36 And Attached Railings is a Grade II listed building in the Warwick local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 March 1985. House. 5 related planning applications.

Number 36 And Attached Railings

WRENN ID
quiet-nave-rush
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Warwick
Country
England
Date first listed
12 March 1985
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Number 36 is a house, later used as a club, dating to 1827, with an addition from the late 19th century. It is constructed of pinkish-brown brick, painted to the side and with a painted stucco front facade, and has a hipped Welsh slate roof.

The main range is three storeys with a basement, featuring three bays arranged 1:2, with the bay to the left recessed over two stages. A single-storey range projects to the right with four narrow bays, including one window. The principal two-window bay features two-storey Tuscan pilasters extending through the ground and first floors. The entrance is to the left, reached by six steps to a six-panel door within a distyle Doric porch with engaged pilasters, a frieze, a cornice, and a blocking course. To the left of the door is a round-arched window with fifteen panes, margin lights, and stained glass, punctuated by a keystone and a continuous impost band. The ground floor otherwise has replacement mock 1/1 sash windows with sills. The first floor has a 3/6 sash window to the left bay, a blind opening to the return, and two replacement mock 1/1 sash windows with sills. A continuous frieze and cornice run along the top of this level. The second floor has pilaster strips and 3/6 sash windows throughout, all set in plain reveals. A frieze band and cornice cap the facade, with side stacks rising from the hipped roof. The basement has a central blocked segmental-arched entrance flanked by blocked, elliptically-arched window openings in plain reveals.

The attached right range has a deep chamfered plinth, with five Doric pilasters on plinths to the ends and between bays. A mosaic roundel depicting a head is set into the first bay, and a mock 1/1 sash window has been inserted into the second bay. The frieze features paterae. To the left return are a 6/6 sash window and a 3/6 sash window. The interior of the building was not inspected.

The front railings have bars and fleur-de-lys finials. The right range was originally built as a billiard room. Warwick Street itself was laid out between 1822 and 1826.

Detailed Attributes

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