No. 11 With Boundary Wall And Gate Piers is a Grade II listed building in the Bath and North East Somerset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 August 1975. Terrace house. 2 related planning applications.

No. 11 With Boundary Wall And Gate Piers

WRENN ID
fallow-shingle-sorrel
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bath and North East Somerset
Country
England
Date first listed
5 August 1975
Type
Terrace house
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Terrace house dating to approximately 1800 to 1804, with alterations in the 20th century. It was possibly designed by Charles Harcourt Masters. The house is constructed of limestone ashlar with a slate roof. It is a double-depth range, entered from the south side, but with its principal elevation and garden facing north.

The exterior is three storeys high and has two windows. The first floor features a tripartite sash window with eight, twelve, and eight panes of glass. Below it is a ten, fifteen, and ten-pane Venetian window. The ground floor has a 20th-century glazed door with a fanlight and ten-pane sash sidelights, along with a pair of deep fifteen-pane sashes. There is a broad platband above the ground floor, a lintel, a slight frieze, a cornice, a blocking course, and a parapet. A stack is located to the left, and paired stacks are on the right, with a hipped end to the roof on the left. The rear of the house is constructed of painted rubble with a concrete tile roof, set back at the left end, and has twelve-pane sashes, and two stair sashes. A low door is positioned to the left, leading to a lean-to porch with a wider six-panel door under a slab hood, supported by brackets. To the right, a three-storey section is brought forward with a plain parapet above twelve-pane sashes.

The interior was not inspected.

The property is accompanied by a pair of plain square ashlar gate piers with low pyramidal cappings, which support a 20th-century iron gate. These are flanked by boundary walls constructed of coursed rubble to plain coping, approximately 1.5 metres high to the right, and higher to the left, returning to the party divisions.

This house forms part of a long speculative row, built in various forms. Originally part of an identical pair, No. 10 alongside was rebuilt differently at a later date.

More on this building

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  • Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
  • Sale history — 25 transactions since 1996
  • Related listed building consents — 2 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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