The Belvedere Wine Vaults And Attached Railings is a Grade II listed building in the Bath and North East Somerset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 June 1950. Public house. 3 related planning applications.

The Belvedere Wine Vaults And Attached Railings

WRENN ID
tall-step-jet
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bath and North East Somerset
Country
England
Date first listed
12 June 1950
Type
Public house
Source
Historic England listing

Description

This is a late 18th-century terrace house, now a public house. It was altered in the 20th century. The front of the building is limestone ashlar, with rubble to the basement. Ashlar is also used on the right side, while the rear is a mix of ashlar and rubble. A single-story extension to the right has a painted facade. The roof is a mansard style, with a hipped section to the right, covered in concrete tiles. It features a coped gable wall to the right and a coped party wall with two ashlar stacks, topped with early clay pots at the front. The rear stacks have been partly rebuilt using reconstituted Bath Stone. A staircase leads to the rear.

The building is three stories, with an attic and basement, and has a two-window front. The first floor has two plate glass sash windows with horns, set in plain reveals and stone sills, and the second floor has similar windows. The ground floor has a similar window to the left, and to the right, a six-panel door with a single-pane overlight, also in a plain reveal. The single-story extension to the right has two 20th-century windows. The basement window has been blocked, and there is a 20th-century door in the extension and windows to the front. A double dormer features plate glass sash windows with horns. A moulded string runs above the ground floor, continuing as a cornice to the extension, and is topped by a coped parapet. The right side has an extension with 20th-century windows and a door to the ground floor, and three blind windows on each of the ground and first floors. The rear elevation has 19th and 20th-century windows, and small extensions to the ground floor and basement. A lead hopperhead is located at the eaves in the centre of the rear elevation. Inside, some original plasterwork remains in the front room, which is connected to the rear by an arch with reeded decoration.

Detailed Attributes

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