Flats 11-15 Trinity Place is a Grade II listed building in the Bristol, City of local planning authority area, England. First listed on 4 March 1977. Attached house and shop. 2 related planning applications.

Flats 11-15 Trinity Place

WRENN ID
strange-vestry-sepia
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bristol, City of
Country
England
Date first listed
4 March 1977
Type
Attached house and shop
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Flats 11-15 Trinity Place is an attached house and shop dating to the early 19th century, located in Bristol’s Hotwells area on the west side of Merchant’s Road. The building is constructed of stucco with limestone dressings, brick gable stacks, and a pantile mansard roof. It has a double-depth plan and is built in a Late Georgian style.

The property is three storeys high with a two-window front. It features pilasters rising to a cornice and parapet which is ramped up at the ends. The paired right-hand doorways have raised ashlar surrounds with impost blocks and cornices, two-pane overlights, and a six-panel door with the upper four panels raised, alongside a 20th-century door to the right. A contemporary, shallow, tripartite bowed shop front constitutes a fine example of its type, exhibiting reeded jambs, roundels, and a cornice. It contains eight-by-eight-pane sashes, a four-by-four-pane sash, and eight-by-eight-pane and four-by-eight-pane sashes on the first and second floors respectively, alongside a single dormer. A segmental basement arch completes the facade.

The interior of the building has not been inspected.

Detailed Attributes

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