133, King Street is a Grade II listed building in the Great Yarmouth local planning authority area, England. First listed on 27 June 1953. House with warehouse. 1 related planning application.

133, King Street

WRENN ID
winding-ledge-vale
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Great Yarmouth
Country
England
Date first listed
27 June 1953
Type
House with warehouse
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: EPC · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

No. 133 King Street is a late 17th-century house with an attached warehouse at the rear, which was remodeled in the late 18th century. The building was converted into a shop with accommodation around 1885 and has undergone alterations in the late 20th century. The facade, dating from the 18th century, is made of red brick with burnt headers and features a roof covered in black-glazed pantiles.

The exterior consists of three storeys and has a five-window range. The late 19th-century shop front includes plate glass and internal sliding display doors. Above the fascia, there are 20th-century iron railings and boarding. Each floor has five 6/6 unhorned sash windows set within flush frames. The central sash on the first floor has been converted into a balcony door in the 20th century. This window and others on the first floor are adorned with gauged skewback arches and acanthus keyblocks. A platband runs between the floors, and there is a timber eaves cornice beneath a bell-based gabled roof. Internal gable-end stacks are located on the north and south sides, with the northern stack truncated.

On the north return, there is a mid-18th-century door with six fielded panels (the upper two are glazed) set within a doorcase featuring fluted pilasters, a pulvinated frieze, and a modillion cornice. Extending to the west is a 17th-century warehouse range made of flint and brick, which has loading doors on all three storeys. The upper floor of the warehouse is an addition from when the facade was remodeled in the 18th century. The south face of the warehouse wing has a rebuilt ground floor, and at the second-floor level, there are two 15/15 unhorned sashes in flush frames, also under gauged skewback arches. A late 20th-century French door is present in the main wall.

Inside, there is a barrel-vaulted 18th-century cellar in the rear wing. The ground floor front, which was originally two rooms, is now combined into one. The north door lobby features a patch of 17th-century small-framed panelling. The main staircase has been removed at the ground-floor level, but on the first floor, it retains turned balusters, turned newels with ball finials, and a ramped handrail. The upper landing includes a timber arch, and the rear roof has principals and boxed collars, while the front roof is similar but features arched collars.

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  • Radon risk assessment
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