64, Cricklade Street is a Grade II listed building in the Cotswold local planning authority area, England. First listed on 23 July 1971. Former house, offices.

64, Cricklade Street

WRENN ID
lesser-sandstone-birch
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cotswold
Country
England
Date first listed
23 July 1971
Type
Former house, offices
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

No. 64 on Cricklade Street is a former house with attached maltings that has been converted into offices. It dates from the early 18th century, with later alterations from the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries. The building features coursed squared limestone, with late 19th-century brick on the left side and render at the rear, topped by a Welsh slate roof and a late 19th-century brick stack at the left end.

The structure has two storeys, an attic, and a cellar, with a seven-window range. The first floor includes five two-light stone mullion-and-transom windows in the centre and right, featuring 20th-century single-pane glazing in flat beaded surrounds that extend upwards to the eaves. There are also two late 18th-century six-over-six pane sashes with crown glass in similar surrounds, where the mullions and transoms have been cut out, and with keyed lintels.

On the ground floor, there are four stone mullion-and-transom windows similar to those above in the centre and right, and two early to mid-18th-century six-over-six pane sashes on the left in similar surrounds. The entrance features a door with six flush panels, a decorative fanlight, and flanking pilaster strips within a flat unmoulded stone surround to the left, with a similar blocked former doorway to the right.

The plinth has two blocked openings to the basement on the left, and there is a moulded string course over the ground floor. The eaves gutter is supported by ten fine wrought-iron brackets with twisted decoration, likely from the 18th or early 19th century. The right side has a covered pulley and pairs of doors at the first and second floor levels, retaining some 18th-century fittings but altered in the 20th century. The rear elevation and rear wing have 20th-century timber windows. The interior has not been inspected but is noted to have undergone 20th-century alterations.

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