Dean Terrace is a Grade II listed building in the Cornwall local planning authority area, England. First listed on 22 July 1981. A C19 Terrace of villas. 6 related planning applications.
Dean Terrace
- WRENN ID
- odd-corridor-honey
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cornwall
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 22 July 1981
- Type
- Terrace of villas
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Dean Terrace comprises a row of ten villas built between 1838 and 1847 by S Bone. The villas are constructed of stucco with plinths and horizontal bands, and have dry Delabole slate roofs, except for numbers 4 and 5, where the roofs have been replaced with asbestos slate. They feature hipped projecting bays facing the street, moulded cornices under deep eaves soffits, and stuccoed axial stacks. Most of the villas have cast-iron ogee gutters. The design is based on a double-depth plan and presents a 30-window frontage.
Each villa has a projecting bay on its left side and a central entrance positioned within the angle between the houses, with the exception of number 1, which has a projecting central bay and its entrance on the right-hand return. Most villas have a later bay window on their right side. The windows are mostly original sash windows with glazing bars and some margin panes. The original ground floor windows are recessed within segmental-arched panels. Number 2 has a late 19th-century four-light transomed bay with a dentilled cornice on its right side, along with a porch featuring turned columns.
Most villas retain original box porches with round-headed doorways supported by pilasters and eaves on paired brackets. Number 10 has an early 20th-century porch. The interiors have not been inspected, but are likely to be of interest.
Detailed Attributes
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