Chapel House is a Grade II listed building in the Plymouth local planning authority area, England. First listed on 29 March 1960. Residential. 1 related planning application.

Chapel House

WRENN ID
knotted-trefoil-solstice
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Plymouth
Country
England
Date first listed
29 March 1960
Type
Residential
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Chapel House is likely a pair of town houses, later adapted as a house with a shop, dating from the mid-18th century. The building is constructed of killas rubble with limestone dressings, featuring keyed flat arches over the original ground-floor openings. A tall, rendered plinth with stucco brackets sits beneath the sills, and the roof is covered with steep concrete tiles and a modillion eaves cornice. Two flat-roofed dormers contain six-pane, two-light casements, and rendered brick end stacks are present. The layout is L-shaped, incorporating a wing at a right angle to the rear left. The building is two storeys high plus an attic, with a four-window front. Original 12-pane hornless sash windows remain on the first floor, while a 20th-century sash with glazing bars occupies the ground floor on the right. The late 19th century features a moulded cornice on consoles above a late 20th-century shop window with glazing bars, located on the left, a shop doorway below the second first-floor window, and a house doorway below the third first-floor window. The interior has not been inspected, but may contain original or 19th-century features of interest.

Detailed Attributes

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