108, Middle Street is a Grade II listed building in the Dover local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 July 1987. A Georgian to Victorian House, garage.
108, Middle Street
- WRENN ID
- swift-rotunda-martin
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Dover
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 14 July 1987
- Type
- House, garage
- Period
- Georgian to Victorian
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
No. 108 Middle Street is a Grade II listed house and garage, which was formerly a house, shop, and warehouse. It consists of two sections: the left part dates from the 18th century and was refronted around 1840, while the right part is from the early 19th century and was altered in the late 19th century. The left section is primarily brick, rendered over, with the front designed to imitate masonry. It features a cemented chimneystack and a peg-tiled roof. The building has two storeys and attics, with one window on the front. There is a rendered chimneystack on the left side and a modern flat-roofed dormer. The building has a parapet and a deep moulded cornice.
On the first floor, there is a mid-19th century window with vertical glazing bars set in a moulded architrave. The ground floor has a mid-19th century wooden shopfront with a moulded cornice, four wooden pilasters featuring incised elongated arched decoration, and moulded cills. The shopfront is divided by thin pillars, with a rectangular fanlight above the central door. At the time of the survey, this door was a 20th-century mahogany door with a built-in fanlight that was not in keeping with the original style.
The rear elevation features an M-shaped brick gable and a 18th-century cemented chimneystack. The attic window is a 12-pane sash in a moulded architrave, while the first floor has a 16-pane sash also in a moulded architrave. The right section appears to have originally served as a warehouse and is constructed of painted brick in Flemish bond with a peg-tiled roof. It has two storeys, with the first floor featuring one 12-pane sliding sash window and a four-flush-panelled loading door. The ground floor includes late 19th-century folding doors that are half-glazed, along with one sash window without glazing bars. The rear elevation is made of stock brick and includes one 12-pane early 19th-century sash window with horns, and the rear has a hipped roof.
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
- No related consent applications matched
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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