10 Edenduff Terrace, Antrim, Co Antrim, BT41 4NF is a Grade B2 listed building in the Antrim and Newtownabbey local planning authority area, Northern Ireland. First listed on 20 September 1974.
10 Edenduff Terrace, Antrim, Co Antrim, BT41 4NF
- WRENN ID
- riven-minaret-merlin
- Grade
- B2
- Local Planning Authority
- Antrim and Newtownabbey
- Country
- Northern Ireland
- Date first listed
- 20 September 1974
- Source
- NI Environment Agency listing
Description
A single storey, three-bay terrace house or cottage of rubble basalt, one of a block of what was originally four similar cottages. Main entrance faces south. Entrance elevation: roof of Bangor blue slates in regular courses; dark toned ridge tiles. One chimney, to right-hand extremity: red brick with projecting blue-black brick cornice of three courses, surmounted by a blocking course of red brick; two pots. Walls of basalt rubble with projecting brick eaves course; red brick flat arch to head and block dressings to openings but partly obscured by later cement reveals and raised surrounds; old lime mortar pointing to masonry. Much of walling is covered with creeper. Metal gutter with metal downpipe to right-hand extremity. Elevation comprises a central doorway flanked each side by a window. Windows are rectangular timber sliding sash, 1 over 1, with horns, painted white, with exposed sash boxes painted green; projecting painted stone cills. Doorway contains a rectangular sheeted timber door, surmounted by a rectangular fanlight of obscured glass, in a moulded timber frame; modern metal letterbox; painted stone base blocks to frame. Black PVC vertical trunking for cables to left of doorway. Rear elevation: single storey; roof slated as previous; three original rectangular metal rooflights. Walling similar to entrance front except bottom portion roughly rendered with lime mortar; portion below window is of brickwork; old lime mortar pointing to masonry generally. Metal gutter and downpipe. Rear elevation contains a doorway with a small window to the right: brick dressings to openings. Window is a rectangular timber fixed light with a top-hung vent; projecting painted sandstone cill. Doorway contains a rectangular timber sheeted door set in a broad timber frame; modern metal handle; painted stone base blocks to frame each side of door. SETTING: The building stands within a block of what was originally a terrace of four similar single cottages, the block itself forming part of a row of five similar blocks. The overall terrace stands in a rural area, facing the main road but set back from it slightly, with a tarmac access road immediately in front, separated from the main road by kerbstones. Facing the terrace row is the heavily wooded demesne of Shane's Castle, bounded by a basalt rubble wall, while the rest of the area around consists of agricultural land. The rear is reached by a gravelled driveway along the gable of the adjacent house, No 9, to the west. At the rear of the house is a small gravelled area bounded by the basalt rubble wall of the rear return of an adjacent house to east. Beyond gravelled area are outbuildings of no special interest and a garden.
Detailed Attributes
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