Ivy Terrace is a Grade II listed building in the Wolverhampton local planning authority area, England. First listed on 3 February 1977. Cottages. 1 related planning application.
Ivy Terrace
- WRENN ID
- secret-lantern-winter
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Wolverhampton
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 3 February 1977
- Type
- Cottages
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Ivy Terrace comprises three cottages dating from the late 18th or early 19th century. The cottages are built with plaster on brick and have a tile roof with brick stacks. The elevation has a seven-window range over two storeys, with a small single-storey wing extending from the right end. A decorative brick band runs above the ground floor, and there is a brick cornice. The windows are small, originally with small-paned casements; some have been replaced with 20th-century casements. Specific windows have unique details: the third window on the ground floor of the left-hand cottage (number 49) has a smaller two-light wooden fixed window to its right; the fourth ground-floor window has small-paned iron glazing; and the fifth ground-floor window has a segmental head. The wing features a 20th-century casement window. The entrances are covered by canopies supported by anthemion brackets. Cottages 45 and 47 have plank doors, number 49 has a 20th-century door, and the entrance to the wing (number 43) has a 20th-century half-glazed door. A central plaque is decorated with a fishscale-pattern tile frame and displays the name "IVY TERRACE" in pebbles. The end stacks and three cross-axial stacks have been rebuilt upon older bases. The rear elevation is similar in design.
Detailed Attributes
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