Numbers 87 To 103 And Attached Railings is a Grade II listed building in the Camden local planning authority area, England. First listed on 19 November 1970. A C19 Terrace houses with shops. 12 related planning applications.
Numbers 87 To 103 And Attached Railings
- WRENN ID
- old-rubble-snow
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Camden
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 19 November 1970
- Type
- Terrace houses with shops
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Numbers 87 to 103 form a terrace of nine houses with shops, built around 1816 by James Burton. The buildings are constructed of darkened, multi-coloured stock brick with some later patching, and feature a plain stucco sill band at the third floor level. They are four storeys high, with basements or cellars. Numbers 91 to 99 slightly project from the main facade. The windows are recessed, with gauged brick flat arches above sash windows. The first floors of numbers 87, 91, 101, and 103 incorporate casements and continuous cast-iron balconies. Parapets top the buildings.
The ground floors of numbers 87, 91, and 103 have rusticated stucco with round-arched openings. The doorways feature pilaster-jambs supporting cornice-heads, with mask-head stops to numbers 87 and 91. Fanlights and good panelled doors are present at these entrances.
Number 93 has an earlier-mid 19th century shopfront with a dentil cornice and an enriched console to the right. It retains a projecting shop window with segmental-arched lights and large panes, along with a segmental arched shop and house doorway, fanlight, and panelled door. Attached cast-iron railings with spearhead finials border the area.
Number 95 has an early 19th century shopfront with half-round, fluted Corinthian pilasters supporting an inswept entablature and projecting dentil cornice. It includes a projecting shop window with large panes, a shop and house doorway with a rectangular fanlight, and a panelled door. Attached cast-iron railings with spearhead finials mark the area.
Numbers 97 and 99 have 20th-century shopfronts; number 99 is a reproduction of a 19th-century style but retains original console brackets flanking the fascia. The houses have rectangular fanlights above their panelled doors. Number 99 retains its original stair, dadoes, and internal fittings.
Number 101 features an early 19th century shopfront with reeded, simplified pilasters carrying an inswept entablature with a projecting cornice. It has a projecting shop window with rounded ends and large panes, a round-arched doorway with pilaster-jambs supporting a cornice-head, a fanlight, and a panelled door.
The interiors were not inspected. Attached cast-iron railings with urn finials define the areas of the buildings.
Detailed Attributes
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