9 And 11, Oakfield Road is a Grade II listed building in the Bristol, City of local planning authority area, England. First listed on 31 July 1970. Houses. 14 related planning applications.

9 And 11, Oakfield Road

WRENN ID
broken-ledge-flax
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bristol, City of
Country
England
Date first listed
31 July 1970
Type
Houses
Source
Historic England listing

Description

A pair of attached houses dating from around 1845, possibly designed by RS Pope, are located on Oakfield Road, Clifton, Bristol. They are built of limestone ashlar with party wall stacks and a slate hipped roof. The houses are arranged over three storeys, with a basement and attic, and have a two-window front. The front elevation is Neoclassical in style, with the central section projecting forward and featuring bracketed supports to the attic, a banded ground floor, giant channelled pilasters rising to coved capitals, an entablature, cornice, and a parapet. Single-storey side entrance porches are present; No. 9 has a two-storey porch with pilasters to an entablature and double, three-panel doors. The windows are tripartite, with architraves and moulded cills. Stone balconies are situated on the first floor, with 6/6-pane sashes flanked by 2/2-pane sashes. Smaller second-floor windows incorporate 4/4-pane sashes flanked by 2/2-pane sashes. The attic windows are 3/3-pane sashes set in shallow recesses. The sides of the building feature semicircular-arched stair lights. The interior, which has not been inspected, is noted to contain dogleg staircases, panelled doors and shutters, and cornices.

Detailed Attributes

Structured analysis including materials, construction techniques, architect attribution, and related listed building consent applications. Sign in or create a free account to view.

Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.