1-12, Liverpool Terrace is a Grade II listed building in the Worthing local planning authority area, England. First listed on 11 October 1949. Terraced houses. 22 related planning applications.
1-12, Liverpool Terrace
- WRENN ID
- high-cornice-heath
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Worthing
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 11 October 1949
- Type
- Terraced houses
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Liverpool Terrace comprises numbers 1 to 12, built between 1830 and 1835. The terrace was possibly designed by Amon Henry Wilds of Brighton, though Edward Snewin’s "Glimpses of Old Worthing" attributes the design to Henry Cotton.
The terrace is four storeys high with a basement and an additional storey added to numbers 8 and 10. Each property has four windows. The facade is stuccoed, with the ground floor rusticated. The properties feature a curved bay of three windows on each floor, extending down to the basement level. A cornice and parapet top the building, with a stringcourse running above the first floor. Iron balconies, originally present on the first floor, have been replaced on numbers 8, 11, and 12. Number 10 has a distinctive narthex or colonnade of five large Doric columns over the pavement, with a wide stuccoed balcony above, featuring a balustrade supporting urns. Most of the original glazing bars remain intact. The doorways have rectangular fanlights, and the doors are eight-panelled and moulded. Railings border the basement areas and front steps, with finials shaped like spears impaling crescents.
Numbers 1 to 12 form a group.
Detailed Attributes
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