Hatfield House is a Grade II listed building in the Bath and North East Somerset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 August 1975. House. 3 related planning applications.

Hatfield House

WRENN ID
pale-remnant-spindle
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bath and North East Somerset
Country
England
Date first listed
5 August 1975
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

A pair of houses dating from the early 19th century. The houses were originally known as Hatfield House and Hatfield Place. They are constructed of limestone ashlar with slate roofs. The main frontage faces north, although the primary access is from the south side along Hatfield Road.

The houses are three storeys high with a lower ground floor, each featuring three windows. Hatfield House, on the north side, has two-light casement windows in plain reveals with keystones above plain sash windows at ground and first floors, with balconettes. The lower ground floor has windows with segmental heads. Hatfield Place, to the left, is narrower, with windows more closely spaced; it features a nine-pane sash window on the second floor and a plain sash below, both in plain reveals. Platbands run at two levels, topped by a lintel with frieze, a moulded cornice, a blocking course and a parapet. Three gable stacks are present to the right, with two stacks at the part division and a deep stack marking the left gable end.

The west-facing return has a single sash window at each level to the left, followed by a full-height hipped addition with paired sashes to the two upper storeys. This addition includes a twelve-pane sash at the middle floor and a single sash at ground floor. The Hatfield Road frontage also has three windows per house. Hatfield House has a wide dormer above plain sashes and a one-pane sash at the first floor, alongside a square porch with a panelled door. Hatfield Place has a nine-pane sash, a blind light, and a two-light casement on the second floor; below are three plain sashes with balconettes and two plain sashes to the right of a square porch with a panelled door. The lower ground floor houses a single and triple sash window with a central door. The interior of the houses has not been inspected. The arrangement is unusual, with paired houses of unequal width resulting in differing window spacing.

Detailed Attributes

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