3-15 (consecutive) Aberdeen Terrace and attached front garden walls and piers is a Grade II listed building in the Bristol, City of local planning authority area, England. First listed on 8 January 1959. Terrace of houses. 22 related planning applications.

3-15 (consecutive) Aberdeen Terrace and attached front garden walls and piers

WRENN ID
tangled-gateway-raven
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bristol, City of
Country
England
Date first listed
8 January 1959
Type
Terrace of houses
Source
Historic England listing

Description

This is a terrace of thirteen houses at 3-15 Aberdeen Terrace, Bristol, dating to the late 1840s. They may have been designed by RS Pope or Henry Rumley. The houses are constructed of limestone ashlar with a slate mansard roof and are arranged with a double-depth plan. Each house has three storeys, a basement, and an attic, presenting a single-window facade.

The terrace is formal in design, with projecting end and central houses, the central one featuring prominent acanthus pilasters. Plain pilasters are placed between these elements, extending to a frieze and cornice. The end houses have panelled parapets, while the central house has a raised, truncated pediment and a balustrade. Coping is present on the party walls.

The outer doorways have segmental heads recessed with dentil blocks, overlights with margin panes, and two-panel doors. Ground-floor windows have incised voussoirs. First-floor windows are set within architraves with a floating cornice; numbers 8 and 10 have crowning pediments. The windows are mostly 6/6-pane sashes, with various 20th-century dormers. Side entrance porches with entablatures are found on the end houses, and number 15 has a full-height block behind. Segmental-arched windows are characteristic of the ground floor, while the first floor is dominated by tripartite windows with raised surrounds, a feature also applied to the central house. A full-width cast-iron balcony is supported by brackets.

Inside the properties remains uninspected. Attached to the terrace are front garden rubble walls and rusticated piers with caps.

The terrace is considered a late and isolated example, notable for its central pedimented feature.

Detailed Attributes

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