19, RICHMOND HILL (See details for further address information) is a Grade II listed building in the Bristol, City of local planning authority area, England. First listed on 27 November 1972. House. 4 related planning applications.

19, RICHMOND HILL (See details for further address information)

WRENN ID
hidden-hinge-bistre
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bristol, City of
Country
England
Date first listed
27 November 1972
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: sale history · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

No. 19 Richmond Hill is a Grade II listed building located in Clifton, Bristol. This structure consists of three attached houses that have been combined into one. The original pair dates from the late 18th century, with a mid-19th century extension added. It features a limestone ashlar exterior, party wall stacks, and a copper-clad roof, following a double-depth plan.

The building is designed in a late Georgian style, with elements of Italianate style in the extension. It stands three storeys tall and has a three-window range on the entrance front from the 19th century. The late Georgian pair on the left has a rusticated ground floor and a cornice with a parapet, while the right-hand extension includes a shallow projecting entrance block and a wide exterior stack with bands at the sill heights.

The entrance features a semicircular-arched tripartite doorway flanked by windows, a plate-glass fanlight, and a two-leaf eight-panel door. To the left of the entrance is a small semicircular-arched window, and to the right is a single-storey block with a matching tripartite window, complete with a balustrade on the parapet and aprons below the windows. Above the doorway, there are tripartite windows with segmental arches on the middle windows and plain windows on the left.

The left return of the building has a canted bay with keyed, segmental-arched windows and a balustrade for the balcony. The first floor features a shallow canted bay, while the second floor has a tripartite window, both with segmental heads on the middle windows. The original 18th-century pair on the left has a two-window range with pilasters, a rusticated ground floor, and tall first-floor windows that include balconies with cast-iron brackets and pointed-arched railings, fitted with six-over-six pane sashes.

Inside, the 19th-century block includes a large entrance hall divided by a segmental arch with a panelled soffit, leading to a central open-well staircase with cast-iron balusters that project from the treads, along with cornices and six-panel doors.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 1 transaction since 2012
  • Related listed building consents — 4 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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