Cleveland Place is a Grade II listed building in the Wolverhampton local planning authority area, England. First listed on 3 February 1977. Terrace of houses. 1 related planning application.
Cleveland Place
- WRENN ID
- graven-basalt-azure
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Wolverhampton
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 3 February 1977
- Type
- Terrace of houses
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Cleveland Place is a terrace of four late 18th-century houses located on Tettenhall Road, Wolverhampton. The houses are built of brick with stone dressings, topped with a slate roof featuring coped ends and brick stacks. They are arranged with a double-depth plan over three storeys, with an 8-window front, comprising two bays per house. The ground and first floor windows are 12-pane sashes, with rubbed brick flat arches above. Second-floor windows are 6-pane sashes. Round-headed doorways are located in the second, fourth, sixth, and eighth bays, each featuring a Doric aedicule with an open pediment and a six-panel door. Number 28 has a stained glass fanlight, while numbers 30 and 32 feature fanlights with decorative glazing bars. The roofline includes gable-end and cross-axial stacks, with the latter paired across the ridge. The terrace is enclosed by attached stone-coped front garden walls, and a stone plaque bearing the name "CLEVELAND PLACE" is positioned at the left-hand end. The interior of number 32 features a stick-baluster staircase.
Detailed Attributes
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