Ormond House is a Grade II listed building in the Stroud local planning authority area, England. First listed on 30 June 1961. Town house. 3 related planning applications.

Ormond House

WRENN ID
silent-nave-rowan
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Stroud
Country
England
Date first listed
30 June 1961
Type
Town house
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Ormond House is a town house dating from around 1830, attached to the end of a terrace in Dursley. The front is built of red Flemish bond brick, with coursed limestone rubble to the sides and rear, brick chimneys, and a replacement tile roof. The front elevation has a 4-window arrangement of sash windows; these are 12-pane to the ground and middle floors, and 9-pane to the top floor, all with gauged brick flat arches. An off-centre doorway is topped by an open pediment supported by attached Tuscan columns, leading to a 6-panel door set within a round archway with a fanlight above. A brick pilaster is located to the left of the doorway; the sashes to its left are false and painted. Below these false windows is a round archway providing access to a throughway, and this contains a 6-panel door. The building has a stone plinth and a moulded stone eaves cornice with end returns. Brick chimneys are positioned on the ridge of the roof, one to each gable end. The rear of the building also features sash windows, with segmental stone arches above. The interior has not been inspected. A 2-storey wing extends to the rear.

Detailed Attributes

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