1-24, Ealing Village is a Grade II listed building in the Ealing local planning authority area, England. First listed on 21 March 1991. Block of flats. 9 related planning applications.
1-24, Ealing Village
- WRENN ID
- lost-cobalt-woodpecker
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Ealing
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 21 March 1991
- Type
- Block of flats
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a block of flats built in 1934 by R Toms and Partners for the Bell Property Company. It is one of five similar blocks. The building is constructed of brick with white and red dressings, and has a green tile roof with painted brick chimneys. It is three storeys high with an attic, and has fifteen bays. The main doors each have a single pane of glass in a wooden frame with decorative glazing bars. The windows are small-pane metal Crittal windows with tile sills, and include French windows. The attic has flat-roofed dormers, with the principal ones displaying canted sides and decorative central metal panels where paired. Three entrance and stair towers are evenly spaced, one in the centre, and have curvilinear gables and decorative brick panels connecting the door surrounds and windows above. The attic window on these towers is narrower and round-arched. Full-height canted bay windows are located at each end and between the towers, linked to the towers by balconies featuring decorative openwork panels of semi-circular tiles. The roof has steeply pitched, hipped sides and a flat top. The rear elevation retains its original window arrangement and features metal fire escapes with partially glazed doors. The interior has not been fully inspected but some flats retain original features.
Detailed Attributes
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