3-8, Hampton Row is a Grade II listed building in the Bath and North East Somerset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 May 1972. Terrace houses. 2 related planning applications.

3-8, Hampton Row

WRENN ID
tenth-rotunda-falcon
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bath and North East Somerset
Country
England
Date first listed
12 May 1972
Type
Terrace houses
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Nos. 3-8, Hampton Row are a row of six early 19th century terrace houses, with 20th-century additions. They are built of limestone ashlar with single-pitched slate roofs, double Roman tiles to No. 8, and double chimney stacks to the party walls. The houses have single-depth plans and two storeys plus lower ground floors. A continuous coped parapet, cornice, and first-floor sill band run along the front, with shallow semicircular arched recesses to the ground floor openings. The original door and window frames are contained within the walls.

The fenestration varies slightly across the terrace. No. 3 has a three-window range with two two/two-pane sash windows to the first floor, a central blind window, and blind windows to the party walls on both floors. The ground floor has a six/six-pane sash window to the right and a 20th-century door and porch to the left. No. 4 has a two-window range with six/six-pane sash windows and blind windows to the party walls, with that to the ground floor being tripartite. A six-panel door with overlight is on the right. No. 5 has a two-window range with two/two-pane sash windows to the first floor and blind windows to the party walls above the door. The ground floor has a six/one-pane sash window to the right and a six-panel door with a blocked overlight containing a lozenge panel to the left. One light of a formerly blind tripartite window to the left party wall is now glazed, below the door to a passage to the rear garden. No. 6 has a two-window range with two/two-pane sash windows and a 20th-century six-panel door to the right. A formerly blind tripartite window to the right party wall is now glazed. No. 7 formerly had a blind tripartite window to the left party wall; this has been replaced by a late 19th-century four-panel door, with a recess previously containing a door now blind. A plate glass sash window is to the right. A door to the basement is beneath the front door. No. 8 has a three-window range with six/six-pane sash windows to the first and ground floors, a four-panel door with overlight to the centre, and a blind window to the right, with a door to the basement below. The interiors have not been inspected. These houses were included in Egan's `Walks Through Bath' in 1819, where they are described as "new range of small neat residences."

Detailed Attributes

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