Numbers 103, 105 And 107 And Attached Area Railings To Numbers 103 And 105 is a Grade II listed building in the Cheltenham local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 May 1972. House. 13 related planning applications.

Numbers 103, 105 And 107 And Attached Area Railings To Numbers 103 And 105

WRENN ID
rough-crypt-fog
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cheltenham
Country
England
Date first listed
5 May 1972
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Numbers 103, 105, and 107 form a terrace of three houses, built around 1820 to 1850. Numbers 103 and 105 also include attached area railings. The houses are constructed with stucco over brick, with a slate roof, and a mansard roof in the centre at Number 105. A brick and stucco section is visible at the left end, along with party wall stacks that have cornices. The railings are of iron, and the window guards are wrought iron.

The houses are three storeys high with a basement, and an attic is located centrally in Number 105. They feature seven first-floor windows arranged in a 3:2:2 configuration. Stucco detailing includes horizontal rustication on the ground floor, a tooled band above the first floor supported by pilaster strips with sunk panels, and a first-floor band that is also recessed. A continuous frieze runs along the top, and the cornice is raised as capitals to the centre house. The windows have tooled architraves and sills; the second-floor windows throughout have 3/6 sashes, and the first floor has 6/6 sashes in most locations. The ground floor windows are mostly tripartite with 1/1 sashes, although Number 105 has a central 1/1 sash flanked by 2/2 sashes. The attic windows in Number 105 are 3/6 sashes from the 20th century. The entrances are 20th-century doors with overlights; two of the entrances on the right have decorative glazing bars, and the entrance to the left (Number 107) is sheltered by a two-column Ionic porch with an architrave, frieze, and cornice.

Interior photographs from 1990 show that Number 105 has tooled architraves to doors and moulded cornices, although the rest of the interiors have not been inspected. The first-floor window guards at Numbers 103 and 105 incorporate a rod and circle motif similar to those at Numbers 4, 6, and 8 Montpellier Spa Road. Area railings and gates with urn finials are present, and were likely made by Wheeler, although the lettering is badly worn.

Detailed Attributes

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