No 10 Lambridge Mews is a Grade II listed building in the Bath and North East Somerset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 30 November 2011. Cottage, coach house.
No 10 Lambridge Mews
- WRENN ID
- last-outpost-spindle
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Bath and North East Somerset
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 30 November 2011
- Type
- Cottage, coach house
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
No 10 Lambridge Mews is a Grade II listed building constructed from limestone ashlar and topped with a Welsh slate roof. The structure features a double depth plan with a single depth cottage that faces the garden and a back-to-back single depth coach-house that fronts Lambridge Mews, each under its own roof.
The garden front of the cottage has two storeys and a cellar, with a three-bay layout. The ground floor includes a doorway on the left, two panels with three by two panes above, a central window with three by two fixed lights, and a modern two-light casement window on the right. All three openings have matching pointed interlace heads, and there is a platband at the first floor level. The first floor features three quatrefoil windows with original glazing, a cornice band, a castellated parapet, gable coping, and ashlar ridge stacks that have weathering but no pots. A single-storey conservatory is attached to the rear and spans the width of the house.
The elevation facing Lambridge Mews is also built in ashlar. The front elevation previously had double coach-doors, but one of the openings has been retained and converted into a ground floor window with multi-pane casements above timber, all under a six-pane horizontal light. The second coach-door opening has been partially infilled, retaining half for the current timber entrance door, which has a three-pane horizontal light above. The first floor features two modern sash windows, each measuring three by two. The roof is plain with gable coping.
Inside the cottage, as of 1994, there are three plain original fireplaces with iron hob grates and a staircase with turned balusters. The interior of the coach house is plain and has replacement timbers in the roof.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- Sale history — 4 transactions since 1999
- No related consent applications matched
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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