Numbers 34 And 36 And Attached Railings is a Grade II listed building in the Warwick local planning authority area, England. First listed on 25 March 1970. Houses, flats. 2 related planning applications.
Numbers 34 And 36 And Attached Railings
- WRENN ID
- sleeping-lancet-finch
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Warwick
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 25 March 1970
- Type
- Houses, flats
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Numbers 34 and 36 are two houses, now flats, with attached railings, built between 1828 and 1834 in Royal Leamington Spa. Later additions and alterations include a late 20th-century attic to the right. The houses are constructed of pinkish-brown brick with painted stucco to the front facades, and have a Welsh slate roof to the left, with the rest of the roof concealed. The building has a Welsh slate roof to the left and a cast-iron railing.
The houses are three storeys with an attic and basement, and have four first-floor windows. Stucco detailing includes horizontal rustication to the ground floor and a continuous first-floor band interrupted by four Ionic pilasters. The first floor features full-height windows; those to the left are eight-pane French windows with divided overlights, while those to the right are tall six-over-six sash windows with blind boxes and plain reveals. The second floor features eight-over-eight sash windows with sills and plain reveals. A low parapet with copings sits above.
The ground floor has steps leading to entrances, with part-glazed doors and overlights featuring glazing bars in plain reveals. The doorcases have pilaster strips, a frieze, and a cornice. Each house has a canted bay window; the central window is a two-over-two sash with four-over-eight sashes to the sides, topped by a frieze and cornice. The left bay window has fielded-panel aprons. The attic has roof lights to the left, with a continuous two-window dormer to the right. The basement on the left has a glazed door between a multi-pane casement and a four-over-eight sash; the basement on the right has a glazed door between multi-pane casements. There are side stacks. A continuous first-floor balcony with a heart-and-anthemion motif is to the left, while individual balconies with a double-heart-and-anthemion motif are to the right.
The interior was not inspected. The area railings and gates flanking the steps have bars with lozenge finials, and the end posts are surmounted by anthemions. Grove Street was laid out in 1828, with the west side and lower part of the east side constructed by 1834. Numbers 14 to 46 (even) Grove Street and Number 5 Regent Street form an architectural group.
Detailed Attributes
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