Numbers 93 To 99 And Attached Garden Walls is a Grade II listed building in the Barnet local planning authority area, England. First listed on 28 November 1996. House. 6 related planning applications.

Numbers 93 To 99 And Attached Garden Walls

WRENN ID
spare-kitchen-ivory
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Barnet
Country
England
Date first listed
28 November 1996
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

A group of four houses connected by brick garden walls, dating from circa 1911, located within the Hampstead Garden Suburb. The houses are constructed of purple brick in Flemish bond, with red brick dressings, including a moulded sill band on the first floor. The roofs are tiled with swept boxed eaves. The group exhibits a roughly symmetrical design centered around the party wall between numbers 95 and 97, which are treated as a unified six-window range. The corners feature broad, full-height pilaster strips with recessed bricks to resemble quoins.

The entrances are located between the first and second, and fifth and sixth window ranges. Original design doors lead into rectangular bays with roofs extending across the entrance, supported by wooden uprights. Hipped dormers are present over the entrance ranges, with an axial ridge stack along the party wall and moulded stacks to the rear returns. Casements are used in the bay windows, and the first-floor sashes are of original design.

The brick garden walls are pierced by segmental-arched openings and include sheds to the rear. The end houses (numbers 93 and 99) are two stories with dormers, arranged on an L-shaped plan. Number 93 has corner detailing similar to the central block; the entrance is set back within a one-window range, with a projecting two-window range. A plain bracket porch features over the entrance. Ground-floor windows have round relieving arches, with herringbone brick patterning within the tympana. The axial exterior stack on the right return incorporates a dormer buttress, and the cross-wing roof is hipped, with an axial stack to the rear. Original design sashes and doors are present.

Number 99 is the largest and most elaborate house, designed as a single-ended hall house. A two-window range is present on the cross-wing. The entrance, located within the hall range, is round-arched and subordered, flanked by small casements with angled corners. Ground-floor windows are similar to those in number 93. An inside return to the cross-wing features a one-window range, with a hipped dormer connecting the wings. A two-window range is present on the right return, with a canted bay to the second window, and a ground-floor window set in a segmental-arched recess. Two windows are located at the rear, with a dormer above, and an axial stack to the left of the rear return. Original design windows are incorporated throughout.

Detailed Attributes

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