Numbers 106 To 110 Including Attached Walls And Railings is a Grade II listed building in the Greenwich local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 November 2002. Terrace.

Numbers 106 To 110 Including Attached Walls And Railings

WRENN ID
slow-garret-marsh
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Greenwich
Country
England
Date first listed
5 November 2002
Type
Terrace
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: sale history · EPC · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

Numbers 106 to 110, including attached walls and railings, form a terrace built in 1848, known as Eliza Cottages on the 1853 Ordnance Survey map. This building is designed in the Italianate style and constructed of stock brick, featuring a stuccoed cornice, window dressings, and a band between the floors and basement. The slate roof is consistent across the properties, except for number 108, which has 20th-century pantiles. The terrace stands three storeys tall with a basement, and each property has three windows.

The central bay of each property is recessed between the first and second floors. The windows are 12-pane sashes, with smaller windows and central blanks on the first floor, larger windows with ears and feet to the architraves on the first floor, and cambered headed sashes with ears and stops on the ground floor. There are French windows leading to the basements. The doorcases are cambered, with numbers 106 and 108 retaining moulded cornices and semi-circular fanlights with two glazing bars. Numbers 106 and 108 also have pilasters and original two-panelled doors, while number 110 has lost its pilasters and features a 20th-century door with a built-in fanlight.

The terrace includes an attached low wall and cast iron railings with elongated oval shapes, rosettes, and moulded principals topped with urns. An attached section of wall to number 110 has stone coping and a pyramidal cap. The rear elevation has very few original windows and features a later 19th-century addition to number 108 and a 20th-century extension to number 110.

Inside, the properties feature wide arches with impost blocks, original wooden shutters, and some cast iron firegrates. Historically, these buildings housed officers from the nearby Royal Artillery Barracks.

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  • Radon risk assessment
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