41 AND 43, MEADWAY is a Grade II listed building in the Barnet local planning authority area, England. First listed on 28 November 1996. Pair of houses. 2 related planning applications.

41 AND 43, MEADWAY

WRENN ID
tangled-screen-sorrel
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Barnet
Country
England
Date first listed
28 November 1996
Type
Pair of houses
Source
Historic England listing

Description

The houses at 41 and 43 Meadway, in the Hampstead Garden Suburb, were built between 1910 and 1911 to designs by T. M. Wilson. They are constructed of brick in stretcher bond to the end bays, with a painted pebble dash finish to the recessed central sections. The roofs are tiled, with swept, boxed eaves. The houses are two storeys high, with dormers.

The design treats the pair as a double-ended hall house, featuring a single-window range to each crosswing bay and a four-window range to the central section, arranged symmetrically around the party wall. All openings are flat arched. Entrances are sheltered by porches supported by metal brackets, located in the first and fourth bays. The doors are of an original design. Two-light hipped dormers are placed high on the front roof slope of the central section, aligned with the windows below. The windows themselves are of an authentic design. The building includes moulded axial stacks to the ridge at the party wall, and further axial stacks to the end walls which rise from offset buttress chimney breasts, a distinctive feature that elevates the design above other similar houses on Meadway.

Detailed Attributes

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