74, CORRINGHAM ROAD (See details for further address information) is a Grade II listed building in the Barnet local planning authority area, England. First listed on 28 November 1996. House. 1 related planning application.

74, CORRINGHAM ROAD (See details for further address information)

WRENN ID
gaunt-step-autumn
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Barnet
Country
England
Date first listed
28 November 1996
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

These are two houses, located at 2 and 4 Corringway, and 74 Corringham Road, in the Hampstead Garden Suburb, built in 1911 and designed by Barry Parker and Raymond Unwin. The houses are constructed of red brick in a Flemish bond pattern, with red brick dressings around the windows and corners. They have hipped tile roofs with swept and boxed eaves, and feature two- and three-light hipped dormers.

The front elevation facing Corringway has five windows, with the fourth window being a full-height polygonal bay. The remaining windows alternate between two- and four-lights. Almost all windows are casements of an original design, except for a window on the first floor of the Corringham Road elevation. Entrances are positioned under round relieving arches within the second and fifth window bays. All window openings are flat arched, with the exception of a round window to the right of the entrance to No. 2. A dormer buttress supports an external axial stack on the return of No. 4, while an axial ridge stack sits on the party wall.

The Corringham Road elevation has a six-window range, a setback corner return, and the two wings join at an oblique angle following the pavement line. The arrangement is similar to that of numbers 1 and 3 Corringway, and relates to number 76 Corringham Road. A round-arched cross passage with an original gate is within the third window bay. The entrance to No. 74 is under a bracketed porch in the fifth window bay, and the sixth bay is a shallow, full-height canted bay that slightly projects beyond the eaves. An axial ridge stack is above the cross passage; an axial stack is located on the front slope of the roof between ranges five and six. The houses incorporate original design doors. The buildings blend elements of English classical and vernacular Revival styles, and are part of a significant group of properties including numbers 1 and 3, 5-17 odd, 6-18 even Corringway, and 62-76 even Corringham Road.

Detailed Attributes

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