1-11, Beaufort Place 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 houses. 12 related planning applications.

1-11, Beaufort Place

WRENN ID
slow-tin-crimson
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bath and North East Somerset
Country
England
Date first listed
5 August 1975
Type
Terrace houses
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

This is a row of eleven terrace houses, located on the north side of Beaufort Place, facing south-west and stepping downhill from number 3. The terrace includes a public house and a shop on the corner with St Saviours Road (numbers 1 and 2). The houses were built around 1820, with alterations made in the mid-19th century and the 20th century.

The houses are constructed of painted limestone ashlar. Numbers 3 to 10 have double-pitched slate roofs with moulded stacks on the shared party walls. Numbers 1 and 2 have double Roman tile roofs, hipped on the left side. The houses are double depth, with two-story rear wings. They are two storeys high, with each house originally featuring one window. The ground floors have platbands, and coped parapets and cornices feature on the south-west facades.

Photographs from 1945, held in the National Monument Record, show that the original terrace had a set of Regency porches with trelliswork flanks; several of these remain. Number 1, at the north-east corner, has an eight/eight pane sash window on the first floor, above a 20th-century shop. Number 2, at the north-west corner, has two plate glass sash windows on the first floor, as well as a mid-19th-century shop with moulded pilasters, a fascia with a corniced overhang, and a six-pane shop window with a half-glazed door and overlight. To the right of the shop is a half-glazed four-panel door with a hood supported by metal brackets. On the south-west facade, number 2 has a plate glass first floor window above a similar shop window; it was formerly a public house.

Numbers 3 to 10 originally had six/six pane sash windows and six-panel doors, although some have been altered and now feature various porches and hoods. Number 11, on the right, is wider and has two window ranges to the front. It has a full-height segmental bow to the left, with tripartite eight/eight pane windows, the first floor window featuring a balconette. An entrance range, single-storey to the front and two storeys to the rear, has a semicircular arch leading to a recessed six-panel door. The cornice is returned to the corner. A wrought iron lamp bracket is located on the rear right corner.

The interiors of the houses were not inspected. Subsidiary features include gate piers with pyramidal caps, linked by dwarf walls of ashlar.

More on this building

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  • Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
  • Sale history — 7 transactions since 2011
  • Related listed building consents — 12 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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Nearby listed buildings

  1. 8, St Saviour's Road and Burger Steakhouse Grade II 41 m
  2. 10 Beaufort Mews Grade II 63 m
  3. 9 Beaufort Mews Grade II 70 m
  4. No 10 Lambridge Mews Grade II 78 m
  5. 1, 2 and 3 Lambridge and attached walls and gatepiers Grade II 90 m
  6. 4, Lambridge Grade II 91 m
  7. Raised Pavement and Railings in Front of Beaufort East to the Right Grade II 92 m
  8. 5 and 6, Lambridge Grade II 93 m
  9. 5 Beaufort Mews Grade II 98 m
  10. 7, Lambridge Grade II 98 m