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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