24, Lichfield Street is a Grade II listed building in the Wolverhampton local planning authority area, England. First listed on 3 February 1977. House, office. 6 related planning applications.
24, Lichfield Street
- WRENN ID
- rough-keep-indigo
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Wolverhampton
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 3 February 1977
- Type
- House, office
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This early 19th-century house, now an office, is located on Lichfield Street in Bilston. It is constructed of brick with ashlar dressings and has a hipped concrete tiled roof with brick stacks. The building has a double-depth plan and stands three storeys high, with a two-window front and a three-window return. A sill band runs along the first floor, and a top cornice defines the top of the building. The ground and first-floor windows have moulded friezes and consoled cornices over 16-pane sashes. The second-floor windows have 9-pane sashes, also with consoles to the cornice. Lateral brick stacks are visible on the return. The left return has similar detailing, but the ground floor includes a single window with a wedge lintel and a semi-circular-headed entrance. This entrance has fielded-panelled reveals and soffit, a fanlight above a six-fielded-panelled door with a wreath knocker. Inside, the staircase features slender, enriched iron balusters. The building holds group value by virtue of its contribution to the streetscape.
Detailed Attributes
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