3, 5 AND 7, HARTINGTON PLACE (See details for further address information) is a Grade II listed building in the Cumberland local planning authority area, England. First listed on 11 April 1994. Terrace of houses. 3 related planning applications.
3, 5 AND 7, HARTINGTON PLACE (See details for further address information)
- WRENN ID
- endless-chalk-claret
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cumberland
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 11 April 1994
- Type
- Terrace of houses
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a terrace of four houses, dating to the early 1870s, located on Hartington Place, with one house extending at an angle to Chatsworth Square. The terrace incorporates number 20 Chatsworth Square. The houses were originally designed with a double-depth plan.
The facades are constructed of Flemish bond brickwork, with a chamfered plinth. The corner on Chatsworth Square has flush quoins. The detailing is in calciferous sandstone, some of which has been painted, and includes a string course and stone-bracketed metal gutter. The roof is covered in Welsh slate, with a hipped roof on the corner, and original shared ridge brick chimney stacks.
Each house on Hartington Place has two bays and is characterised by a right-panelled door (one a 20th-century replacement) with a fanlight within a gabled stone porch supported by colonnettes with leaf capitals, accessed by steps. The ground-floor windows are sash windows, paired within brick reveals, with stone sills and chamfered lintels.
Number 20 Chatsworth Square, which provides a four-bay return onto Hartington Place, has an off-centre panelled door and overlight in a painted quoined surround, beneath a gabled brick and stone hood. Its sash windows, with paired windows on the right, are also in brick reveals, with stone sills and chamfered lintels. The interiors have not been inspected.
Detailed Attributes
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