Numbers 58 60 And 62 Attached Coach House (Number 62) is a Grade II listed building in the Cheltenham local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 May 1972. Villa. 7 related planning applications.

Numbers 58 60 And 62 Attached Coach House (Number 62)

WRENN ID
stubborn-slate-finch
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cheltenham
Country
England
Date first listed
5 May 1972
Type
Villa
Source
Historic England listing

Description

This is a pair of semi-detached villas with an attached coach house, dating from around 1830. They are now used as three separate dwellings. The villas are built of stucco over brick, with slate roofs; the roofs on the left and centre are hipped, while the roof to the right is hipped with a gable and a central brick stack. An iron verandah is also present.

The villas have a double depth plan with full-height bows and service wings to the rear, and the coach house extends as a single-story section. The front elevation has nine first-floor windows, with the central five projecting forward and a dummy window centrally positioned. First-floor windows are 6/6 sash windows. Ground-floor windows consist of plate-glass French windows to the left and 8-pane French windows with divided overlights and margin-lights to the right, with tripartite windows at each end. The left-hand end window has 1/1 sashes, while the right has 6/6 sashes between 2/2 sashes. All openings have plain reveals and stone sills; original Venetian blind boxes and blinds remain to the first floor. Four-panel doors with overlights and margin-lights are located at the entrances on either side of the projecting central section. A crowning cornice tops the building. The rear bow features tripartite 6/6 sashes between 2/2, where original.

The coach house retains an arched opening with double carriage doors, and a central round-arched opening to the upper stage with a 3/3 sash window.

The house on the right (No.60) retains many original features, including 6-fielded-panel doors within fluted architraves, which have floral decorations in the corners. The open-well staircase has stick balusters with a wreathed handrail and brass stir treads to the lower stairs. Two marble fireplaces are present on the ground floor, and panelled shutters are also original. Notably, the pitch pine woodwork appears never to have been painted.

The ground-floor verandah features lozenge and scroll decorations to the uprights and an arched frieze.

Detailed Attributes

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