Hillfield Parade is a Grade II listed building in the Gloucester local planning authority area, England. First listed on 23 January 1952. Terrace of houses. 4 related planning applications.

Hillfield Parade

WRENN ID
little-portal-swallow
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Gloucester
Country
England
Date first listed
23 January 1952
Type
Terrace of houses
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Hillfield Parade is a terrace of seven houses built around 1827 for Joseph Roberts, a printer. The houses are constructed of painted stucco over brick, with slate roofs and brick stacks topped with chimney pots. They are arranged as a double-depth block with rear wings and include stacks on the party walls.

The front elevations feature an offset plinth, a continuous raised band at first-floor level, a continuous crowning cornice with a frieze band, and a parapet. The ground floor doorways, set within segmental arched openings, have narrow sidelights and fanlights. Above the doorway of number 104 is a semicircular hood supported on shaped brackets. To either side of each doorway is a single sash window with 4x4 glazing bars, except for number 104, which has two 19th-century plain sashes. The first floor windows are paired sashes with 3x4 glazing bars, all set within openings with projecting stone sills. Numbers 108 and 110 have attics. The interior of the houses has not been inspected. Hillfield Parade was intended as part of a larger development, of which only the terrace at numbers 78 to 90 London Road was also built.

Detailed Attributes

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