4 Belgrave Terrace, Glasgow is a Grade B listed building in the Glasgow City local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 15 December 1970.
4 Belgrave Terrace, Glasgow
- WRENN ID
- pale-bailey-holly
- Grade
- B
- Local Planning Authority
- Glasgow City
- Country
- Scotland
- Date first listed
- 15 December 1970
- Source
- Historic Environment Scotland listing
Description
3 Belgrave Terrace in Glasgow is a classical astylar terrace built in 1856 by Gildard and Macfarlane. This two-storey and basement structure features three-bay houses with three-storey flatted advanced end pavilions. The exterior is made of ashlar stone, with a droved finish to the basement and channelled detailing at the ground floor. The long and short angle quoins are vermiculated on all floors, including the east and west return close entries. The windows are sash and case style, set within architraves, with some featuring glazing bars.
The main elevation includes the end pavilions (Nos 1 and 8), which have central console corniced entrances at the top of steps. These are flanked by pilaster mullioned and architraved bipartite windows, adorned with Greek key lintels. A cornice at the ground floor creates a cill band for the first floor, which features corniced outer bipartites, a frieze, and a central keyblocked window in lugged architraves. The first floor has a frieze, while the second floor includes a cill band and two and one-light keyblocked arched windows, topped with a bold modillion cornice.
For Nos 2-7, the entrances are also console corniced and located to the left at the top of steps, with Greek-key lintels. The parapet walls are pierced with a linked circle pattern. To the right of each entrance, there are two corniced windows with bracketed cills and lugged architraves. A continuous cill band runs along the first floor, which has a plain entablature and cornice. The building features partial pierced parapets, set-back dormers, and corniced axial stacks.
The return to Oakfield Avenue shows a seven-bay facade, with the first bay from the north being a blind bipartite. This section has three storeys and a full basement, with an arched close entry that has a vermiculated surround. The windows are architraved, and there is a three-bay first floor centre section with pilasters and a cornice, along with a cill band on each upper floor. The wallhead stacks have been rebuilt.
The return to Southpark Avenue consists of nine bays, with the first bay from the north and the second bay at ground floor being blind. The ground floor is channelled. No 1 South Park Avenue features a central tripartite entrance section with a keyblocked arched door that has a sculpted tympanum and open pediment, flanked by columns and pilasters with banded vermiculation. The cornice is carried in the outer bays by banded pilasters, with keyblocked, corniced windows above and a pierced parapet on top.
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