1-21, ST HELENS STREET (See details for further address information) is a Grade II listed building in the Cumberland local planning authority area, England. First listed on 28 August 1951. Row of properties. 3 related planning applications.
1-21, ST HELENS STREET (See details for further address information)
- WRENN ID
- waiting-thatch-sage
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cumberland
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 28 August 1951
- Type
- Row of properties
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a continuous row of varied properties on St Helen’s Street, dating from the Georgian period and built in several phases. The buildings are predominantly two storeys, with slate roofs and stone walls faced with different materials. Numbers 1 and 3 have pantile roofs, while others have slate. The properties have a range of front entrances, including 2 panelled doors at No. 3, a modern door at No. 5, and a pair of doors at Nos. 7 and 9. Nos. 7 and 9 include a bow window with fluted pilaster jambs and cornice, formerly a shop. No. 11 and 11a have a panelled door within a moulded stone frame with a cornice and pediment, plus a door to a passage at No. 11a. The upper floors feature sash windows, some with original glazing bars. No. 17, the Grey Goat Inn, is lower in height, with a boarded door to a yard and a two-light stone mullioned window above. A portion of the building has a doorway with Tuscan pilaster-jambs, a curved pediment, and sash windows with moulded stone frames. Numbers 19 and 21 are three-storey buildings, with a four-centred arched carriage entry at No. 19, a panelled door with a fanlight, keystone, moulded caps, and a sash and former shop window on the ground floor. The upper floors have sashes from which the glazing bars have been removed. No. 23, the Manor House, features quoins, pantiles, and a panelled door within a V-jointed architrave, along with sash windows. No. 25, Brougham House, has pantiles and sash windows in moulded stone frames. No. 27, originally part of Brougham House, has a moulded doorway, a former shop window now a house, and a sash window in a moulded frame. No. 29 has two doors (one to a yard), sash windows with vertical glazing bars, and Nos. 31, 33, and 35 feature original bow windows and small-paned sashes. The properties from numbers 1 to 35 form a notable group.
Detailed Attributes
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