12, 13 And 14, Pavilion Buildings is a Grade II listed building in the Brighton and Hove local planning authority area, England. First listed on 26 August 1999. Terraced houses and shops. 10 related planning applications.

12, 13 And 14, Pavilion Buildings

WRENN ID
still-remnant-martin
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Brighton and Hove
Country
England
Date first listed
26 August 1999
Type
Terraced houses and shops
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: EPC · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

12, 13 and 14 Pavilion Buildings are terraced houses and shops built between 1852 and 1853. They are constructed of stucco with a slate roof that is asphalted where visible. The buildings rise three storeys and feature dormers in the attic. Nos. 12 and 13, along with No. 5 Palace Place, each have two windows, while No. 14 includes a chamfered entrance bay at the corner.

The ground-floor shop fronts are flanked by panelled pilasters that support a fascia with elaborate stops featuring heads and urns. However, No. 12 has lost all its 19th-century shop-front details, and No. 14 lacks fascia stops. The glazing details for all shops are missing, but No. 13 retains a cast-iron grille and a bracketed clock above the fascia.

No. 14 boasts an elaborate flat-arched entrance beneath a coved round arch, flanked by pilasters with banded rustication, and features a console and a lion's head at the keystone. The chamfered corner has rusticated pilaster strips on the upper floors, with a two-storey canted oriel window in between. The first-floor windows are generally flat-arched with architraves and cornices, while the second-floor windows are segmental-arched with eared architraves on the south side, flat-arched with cornices on Palace Place, and lack details on the corner oriel. On the south side, the architraves extend upward in an unmoulded form to an entablature that projects over brackets, forming sills for the dormers. These dormers have flat-arched windows beneath a round arch, with a simplified tympanum, and similar dormers are found on Palace Place and the corner, all featuring a balustrade in front. The buildings have a mansard roof with end and ridge stacks. The interior has not been inspected.

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  • Radon risk assessment
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