90, Bove Town is a Grade II listed building in the Somerset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 26 March 1973. A C17 House. 3 related planning applications.
90, Bove Town
- WRENN ID
- final-turret-dew
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Somerset
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 26 March 1973
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a 17th-century house with later additions and alterations, located on Bove Town, part of a planned medieval development originally connecting Glastonbury to routes heading east. The building is constructed of brick and random rubble, with pantile roofs and brick stacks to the west end gables. The front (north) elevation is symmetrical, featuring three bays with three-light casement windows under segmental-headed brick lintels with keystones, and a central doorway with a glazed door on the ground floor. The east gable wall was rebuilt in matching materials following the demolition of numbers 92 and 94 in the late 20th century, and now incorporates a late 20th-century entrance porch and casement windows with brick lintels and keystones. The rear (south) elevation is primarily of rubble stone with some brick patching. The left-hand section has a higher roofline and contains sash windows with glazing bars, likely later insertions. The eastern portion features flat-headed casements, probably dating to the 20th century. A single-storey addition with a pantile roof projects at right angles to the rear elevation. The interior has not been inspected. The property is designated at Grade II for its architectural appeal, its strong group value alongside other listed buildings on Bove Town, and its contribution to the historical character of Glastonbury.
Detailed Attributes
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