No 1 No 3 (Wembley) Nos 5 And 7 No 13 (Cheapside) is a Grade II listed building in the Dorset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 30 November 1971. House.
No 1 No 3 (Wembley) Nos 5 And 7 No 13 (Cheapside)
- WRENN ID
- swift-cellar-briar
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Dorset
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 30 November 1971
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Nos 1, 3, 5, 7, and 13 form a range of buildings situated around a courtyard known as Higher Newland. No 1, dating to the 19th century, is a two-story, two-window house with a pebbledash exterior. It is designed to be in scale with the surrounding buildings of Newland and those located on Cheap Street and Higher Cheap Street. It features small sash windows, with one above and another to the right below. A lower connecting wing of one bay is set back, with a further projecting wing of one bay built as a lean-to outshut against No 3; a pebble dash wall includes a ledged door between these elements.
Nos 3 and 5 likely have origins in the 17th century. They are two-story buildings with pantile gabled roofs and colour-washed stone rubble fronts. A central mock four-centred arch provides access to No 7 at the rear. No 3 features a four-light stone mullioned window above a passageway, along with a three-light sash window, a door with a cover, and a later three-light sash window on the ground floor. No 5 has two-light casement windows on the first floor and a three-light stone mullioned window with a dripmould on the ground floor. An entrance is located at the north-east end of the passageway.
No 7 is located to the rear of No 13, accessible through the passageway connecting Nos 3 and 5. It is a two-story and attic structure with a pantile roof and stone rubble front, including a two-light casement window above and a three-light window below. A ledged door is positioned in a frame with an attached glazed porch.
No 13, likely with a 17th century core, consists of two stories and three windows. It has a pantile roof, stone rubble front, and an external chimney with stone in the lower part and a tall brick stack above. The upper floor features two-light windows and one three-light casement at the east end. A moulded cornice sits above the ground floor windows. A fixed modern window, a sash window without glazing bars, and a central modern ledged door complete the façade.
Nos 1 to 7 (odd) and Nos 13 to 17 (odd) are designated as a group.
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- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
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