Grosvenor Place (Terrace), Attached Rear Wall To Number 21 And Front Gated Walls is a Grade II listed building in the Bristol, City of local planning authority area, England. First listed on 4 March 1977. Terrace. 6 related planning applications.
Grosvenor Place (Terrace), Attached Rear Wall To Number 21 And Front Gated Walls
- WRENN ID
- eternal-flint-woodpecker
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Bristol, City of
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 4 March 1977
- Type
- Terrace
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
A terrace of six houses built around 1820 in Clifton, Bristol. The houses are stuccoed with limestone dressings, and have party wall stacks and slate roofs, with a concrete tile mansard roof to number 31. They are arranged with a double-depth plan, and are in a late Georgian style, each house having three storeys and a basement, with a two-window frontage. The terrace is a composed design, with number 31 added to the end. Pilaster strips rise to a moulded coping, and an ashlar pediment adorns number 25. Doorways are on the left-hand side, with number 21 situated in the left return and number 31 featuring a single-storey right-hand porch. The porches have moulded semicircular-arched architraves, fanlights, and recessed six-panel doors. The ground-floor windows are single eight-pane sashes, and the attic windows are four-over-eight pane. Number 31 has a full-height, full-width one-window bow and a dormer window. The interior was not inspected. Attached to the rear garden of number 21 is a wall with a two-centred arched doorway. The front garden is enclosed by ramped walls with capped piers and railings.
Detailed Attributes
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