13 Well Road, Dundee is a Grade B listed building in the Dundee City local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 30 March 1995.
13 Well Road, Dundee
- WRENN ID
- sacred-belfry-meadow
- Grade
- B
- Local Planning Authority
- Dundee City
- Country
- Scotland
- Date first listed
- 30 March 1995
- Source
- Historic Environment Scotland listing
Description
11 Well Road in Dundee is a mid-19th century terrace consisting of four single-storey and attic, three-bay villas. The front features stugged sandstone coursers, while the rear is made of stugged and snecked rubble, with coursed rubble on the gables and ashlar dressings. The painted door and window surrounds complement the grey slate roof. The front elevation has a base and wallhead course, a canted window with a cornice and plain parapet, a margined single window, and a moulded segmental-arched doorcase. The dormers at Nos 9-13 are canted and segmental-headed, with No 7 being slightly more ornate, featuring moulded jambs and a stepped parapet above the canted window, along with a similarly styled architrave for the single window. The doorcase at No 7 has a keystone and moulded cornice with a block pediment, while the single dormer has a round-headed window with a finialled and voluted shaped gable. The villas generally have timber sash and case glazing, except for the attic at No 11, which has modern replacement glazing. No 9 has an original single pane over a two-pane attic window, while the ground floor of No 11 and all windows at No 13 also retain original features. The rear includes border-glazed stair windows with a cat-slide roof, and the skews and dividing walls are ashlar-coped with skew blocks. No 7 has an original corniced ashlar stack, while others have been rebuilt and rendered, except for No 13, which remains unrendered. The villas have uniform cream cans and some original cast-iron rainwater goods.
The front elevation displays a symmetrical arrangement of the four villas, each with a fanlight door, a canted window, and a dormer to the left, and a single window and dormer to the right. The rear elevation of each villa features a door with a fanlight and sidelight to the left, a window and stair window to the right, and a single window to the far right, with No 7 having a bipartite window.
The interior was not seen, but ornamental plasterwork is evident. The original boundary wall is made of rubble with ashlar gatepiers and a spiked cast-iron overthrow adjacent to the east gable of No 7. There are modern block walls at the front and various walls and out-buildings forming the boundary at the rear.
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