6, Cleveland Place East is a Grade II listed building in the Bath and North East Somerset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 June 1950. Terrace house, shop. 4 related planning applications.
6, Cleveland Place East
- WRENN ID
- standing-cobble-rook
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Bath and North East Somerset
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 12 June 1950
- Type
- Terrace house, shop
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is an irregular terrace house, now a shop. It was likely designed by H.E. Goodridge and built between 1727 and 1830, with alterations made in the mid-19th century and the 20th century. The exterior is limestone ashlar, with an unseen roof and a stack to the left party wall. The house is four storeys high, including an attic, and one window wide. It has tripartite windows with panelled stone uprights. The attic has a recessed section with a parapet, cornice, and sill band, containing a three/three-pane sash window flanked by plain paired pilasters. A straight cornice, frieze, and lintel band are supported by paired giant order Tuscan pilasters, flanking a six/six-pane sash window. A moulded sill string course runs along the second floor, and a six/nine-pane sash with a pedimented lintel string course is on the first floor. A similar string spans the facade above a plain 20th-century shop fascia. The shop front, dating to the mid-19th century, features a half-glazed door with a three-pane overlight to the left, and two-pane overlights above each paired plate glass sash window with curved upper corners. The ground floor has banded rusticated pilasters, and to the right is a four-panel door with overlight. The interior has not been inspected. This house was part of Goodridge's Late Georgian development of Cleveland Place and Bridge for the Bathwick Estate.
Detailed Attributes
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