11, Dollar Street is a Grade II listed building in the Cotswold local planning authority area, England. First listed on 23 July 1971. Bakery, shop, residential. 1 related planning application.
11, Dollar Street
- WRENN ID
- solemn-gable-equinox
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cotswold
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 23 July 1971
- Type
- Bakery, shop, residential
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
No. 11 Dollar Street is a bakery, shop, and living accommodation, likely dating from the mid-15th century, with alterations, additions, and rebuilding in the late 17th and 19th centuries. The front is constructed of coursed squared limestone, now painted, with stucco to the rear and a rear wing. It has a Welsh slate roof.
The mid-15th century street-front range was refaced in the 18th or early 19th century. A late 17th or early 18th century wing sits to the rear left, and an early to mid-19th century extension is to the rear right. The building is two storeys and an attic, with a three-window front. The first floor has three 19th-century two-over-two-pane horned sash windows in plain reveals. The ground floor features a 20th-century hardwood shopfront to the left with plate glass windows and a glazed door in the centre, with a carriage entrance to the right. There are two gabled dormers with 19th-century two-light timber casements. A band course runs above the first floor.
The rear wing, dating from the late 17th century, has 19th-century four-light timber mullion-and-transom windows to the ground and first floors of its side elevation, along with a coved timber eaves cornice. A 19th-century addition to the rear of the main range includes two six-over-six-pane sashes with vermiculated keyed lintels to the first floor, and a 19th-century two-light casement with a similar reveal to the ground floor.
The interior includes a 19th-century winder stair from ground to first floor and an early 18th century closed string well staircase with turned balusters, an upstanding handrail, and continuous chamfered newels from the first to the second floor. The front ground floor, now a shop, has two heavy chamfered cross beams. The beam in the bay to the left has a diagonal cut stop, and the beam in the bay to the right is unstopped. Heavy joists are visible in the end bays. The bridging beam and joists in the central bay, originally open to the roof, are in a smaller section. A three-bay roof structure is visible in the central and right bays, featuring heavy smoke-blackened principals, a diagonal ridge purlin, heavy butt-purlins, and renewed collars. Remnants of two tiers of windbraces are visible in the central bay, with only the lower tier present in the bay to the right. The rear slope has some renewed rafters, while the rafters to the front slope were renewed when the building was refaced and the roof pitch altered. A hollowed stone eaves gutter is now inside the front slope. A closed truss to the right end has an early collar and studded infill, possibly of early origin.
Detailed Attributes
Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.