103-107, HIGH STREET is a Grade II listed building in the Bath and North East Somerset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 August 1975. A Late C18/early C19 Row of houses. 4 related planning applications.
103-107, HIGH STREET
- WRENN ID
- muted-jamb-winter
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Bath and North East Somerset
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 5 August 1975
- Type
- Row of houses
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a row of five houses located on the north side of High Street, Weston. The houses date from the late 18th century and early 19th century, with alterations made in the 20th century.
The building materials are limestone ashlar with roofs of double Roman tile and slate. The roofs have moulded stacks to the coped gable ends and party walls. Number 103, the leftmost house, has two storeys and a lower ground floor. It is a two-window range with an eaves band and platband over rough ashlar to the lower ground floor. It has two/two-pane sash windows to the upper floors and a segmental arch over a 19th or 20th century double-planked door. A 20th century door is present in the right return, which has no windows. Houses 104, 105, and 106 are three-storeys high, each a one-window range. They share a continuous coped parapet and cornice and have six/six-pane sash windows. Exuberant scrolled wrought iron brackets support 20th-century tiled lean-to hoods over 20th-century doors—one to the right of No.104, and paired doors to the inside of the right side of the block for Nos. 105 and 106. Number 107, likely older, is two storeys with an attic, and has a single-window range. It has a slate and pantile mansard roof with an original raking dormer to the centre, six/six-pane sash windows to each floor, and a 20th-century porch and door to the left. The rear elevation has a single-pitched double Roman tile roof over 20th-century windows. The interiors were not inspected during the listing process.
Detailed Attributes
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