127 AND 129, LONGWESTGATE is a Grade II listed building in the North Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 22 December 1953. Houses. 2 related planning applications.
127 AND 129, LONGWESTGATE
- WRENN ID
- distant-gargoyle-myrtle
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- North Yorkshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 22 December 1953
- Type
- Houses
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a pair of late 18th-century houses, numbered 127 and 129, located on the south side of Long Westgate. They have basements and two storeys with attics. The houses are constructed of red brick with block string courses above the window heads and a bracketed wooden cornice, which continues from number 125. The roof is covered in pantiles, with two flat-roofed dormers. There are six windows on the first floor and four on the ground floor, arranged symmetrically with a central entrance. The windows are flush architraved sashes, without glazing bars, and are set within flat stucco arches. The paired entrances have six-panelled doors with rectangular fanlights, contained within a doorcase featuring three Doric pilasters, an entablature with a triglyph frieze, and a Doric pediment. Plain iron railings lead up three steps to the doors, with urn finial standards.
Numbers 119 to 135 (odd) form a group.
Detailed Attributes
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