No.39 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. House. 3 related planning applications.

No.39 And Attached Railings

WRENN ID
sombre-entrance-gold
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bath and North East Somerset
Country
England
Date first listed
12 June 1950
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

No. 39 is a house, dating to approximately 1790-1793, and subsequently altered in the 19th and 20th centuries. It was designed by John Palmer. The front of the house is built of limestone ashlar, with rendered sections to the basement, and ashlar and rubble to the rear. It has a Welsh slate, double-pile, parapeted mansard roof with a coped party wall and two ashlar stacks to the right. A staircase is located to the rear.

The house is three storeys high, with an attic and basement, and has a three-window front. The first floor has three six/six horned sash windows in splayed reveals, with stone sills and wrought iron balconettes. The second floor has three similar windows without balconettes. The ground floor has two similar windows without balconettes to the right, and a six-panel door with flush, fielded and glazed panels to the left. The door is set within a moulded architrave with a moulded cornice, console brackets with anthemion bases, and roundel decoration, and is approached by a single pennant step. A crossover paved with pennant stones has a cast iron footscraper. The basement, which was opened up in approximately 1986 after previously being blocked and having its railings removed, contains six/six horned sash windows in chamfered reveals with a continuous stone sill, a glazed door and screen in rendered infilling under the crossover, and 20th-century area steps. There are one double and one single dormer window, each with six/six sashes. The exterior includes a band course over the ground floor, a frieze, a moulded eaves cornice, and a cut down coped parapet. A lead hopperhead is located at the eaves to the left. The rear elevation is partially visible and features six/six and 19th-century sash windows, a canted bay with 19th-century plate glass sashes, and a continuous wrought iron balconette to the first floor, as well as a single-storey ashlar parapeted extension.

The interior was not inspected during the listing process. Attached to the property are 20th-century railings with cast heads on limestone bases.

Detailed Attributes

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