Numbers 10, 10A, 16 And The Rose Inn is a Grade II listed building in the Isle of Wight local planning authority area, England. First listed on 15 July 1976. Public house and residential. 5 related planning applications.

Numbers 10, 10A, 16 And The Rose Inn

WRENN ID
solemn-flint-thistle
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Isle of Wight
Country
England
Date first listed
15 July 1976
Type
Public house and residential
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Numbers 10, 10A, 16, and The Rose Inn date from around 1840. This is a three-storey block constructed of roughly dressed stone, with rendering applied to The Rose Inn and numbers 10 and 10A. The facade has ten windows to the upper floors, and is ornamented with giant Ionic pilasters, a stepped frieze, and a moulded projecting cornice. The central bay of numbers 10 and 10A is narrower than the others. The upper floor windows are glazing bar sashes. Numbers 10, 10A, and 16 each feature rectangular first-floor bay windows with dentil cornices; number 10 and 10A have tripartite glazing bar sash lights, while number 16 has a two-light sash with pilasters. Numbers 10 and 10A have two altered shop fronts, with an off-centre house door featuring a segmental arched fanlight. A bracket cornice runs across the front. Number 16 has a modern shop front but retains a carriage arch to the right. The Rose Inn retains its cornice and blocking course above an otherwise altered ground floor. Numbers 4 to 10, 10A, number 16, and The Rose Inn constitute a group, although numbers 4 to 8 (even) are of local interest only.

Detailed Attributes

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