No. 6 And Attached Grating is a Grade II listed building in the Bath and North East Somerset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 11 August 1972. House, flats. 1 related planning application.

No. 6 And Attached Grating

WRENN ID
rough-landing-falcon
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bath and North East Somerset
Country
England
Date first listed
11 August 1972
Type
House, flats
Source
Historic England listing

Description

This is a house, now converted into flats, dating to circa 1783, with alterations from the 19th century. It was developed by John Fielder and Thomas and James Beale. The front of the building is faced with limestone ashlar, with rubble below the basement windows and coursed squared limestone rubble to the left side and rear. It has a double-pile mansard roof, covered with Welsh slate to the front. The rear roof covering is not visible. There are coped gable walls with two ashlar stacks to the left rear, some early clay pots, and five 19th-century octagonal pots on the front. A coped party wall sits to the right, bordering No.5 Brunswick Place.

The house is part of a quasi-symmetrical group, with terminating pavilions projecting to the left and right (Nos. 1 and 6), and a continuous horizontal design element. It is two bays to the left of the three-bay left-end pavilion, with a staircase at the front. The building has three storeys, an attic, a basement, and a sub-basement. The front has a two-window facade. The first floor has a six/six pane sash window with a horn to the left, set in a plain reveal with splayed jambs. Below it is an additional three panes, with a lowered stone sill. To the right is a six/six pane sash in a plain reveal. The second floor has an eight/eight pane sash with a single opening pane to the upper sash in a splayed reveal with a stone sill to the left, and a six/six pane sash with a single opening pane to the upper sash in a plain reveal to the right. The ground floor has a six/six pane sash in a plain reveal to the left and a six-panel door with a flush beaded, fielded, and single glazed panel to the right. The door is set within a 19th-century stone doorcase with square pilasters, moulded console brackets supporting a heavy moulded stone hood, and two Pennant stone steps. The basement has two six/six pane sashes in splayed reveals. The attic has a double dormer with six/six pane sashes. A plinth is present to the left, with a band course over the ground floor bearing incised lettering "BRUNSWICK PLACE". A first floor sill band has been cut through to the left by a lowered window. The building features a bracketed cornice and a coped parapet. The left side is blank, with a blocked window to the ground floor. The rear elevation, partially visible, has two six/six pane sashes to the basement and unglazed openings to the sub-basement, with three grouped plate glass sashes to each of the other floors. The interior was not inspected. A grating is attached to the pavement.

Detailed Attributes

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