9-14, GABLE ROW is a Grade II listed building in the Wychavon local planning authority area, England. First listed on 2 December 1986. A C18 Dwelling.

9-14, GABLE ROW

WRENN ID
winding-minaret-peregrine
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Wychavon
Country
England
Date first listed
2 December 1986
Type
Dwelling
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

This is a group of six dwellings located at 9-14 Gable Row, built in the late 18th century and altered and extended around 1900, likely by architect Richard Norman Shaw. The buildings are constructed of coursed limestone rubble with plain tiled roofs, featuring a south gable-end parapet and large brick ridge stacks. The layout is L-shaped and consists of two storeys.

No 9, which faces east, has one plus three bays, with the left bay projecting as a gabled wing. The main three-bay section includes a ground floor canted bay window with leaded casements, along with a 2-light ground floor casement that has a cambered head. On the first floor, there are three 2-light casements. The central entrance features a moulded cornice, three roundels on the lintel, and a 5-panelled partly-glazed door. The projecting bay to the left has a 16-pane sash window on both floors of its east gable end, as well as a 2-light casement on both floors at the angle with the main part, with the ground floor window also having a cambered head.

To the rear right, facing south, are Nos 10, 11, and 12, which have five bays. All windows are 2-light casements with cambered heads, and the first floor windows are topped with small gables, except for the second bay window, which has a square head and no gable. There are three doorways with cambered heads and ledged and battened doors. The left doorway features a lean-to porch supported by large moulded brackets on stone corbels, similar to those found at Nos 4, 5, 7, and 8 Church Row on the north side. At the left end, the south gable end of No 4 includes a 2-light casement with a cambered head on both floors. Nos 13 and 14 are located in the angle between the two main ranges.

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