10 Woodlands Terrace, Glasgow is a Grade B listed building in the Glasgow City local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 15 December 1970.

10 Woodlands Terrace, Glasgow

WRENN ID
little-dormer-soot
Grade
B
Local Planning Authority
Glasgow City
Country
Scotland
Date first listed
15 December 1970
Source
Historic Environment Scotland listing

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Description

14 Woodlands Terrace in Glasgow is a classical symmetrical terrace of three-bay houses designed by architect John Baird I between 1849 and 1851. The building stands three stories tall, with attics and a basement, and features ashlar stonework that is mostly painted or cleaned. The ground floor is channelled, while the basement is stugged. The ground floor openings have channelled flat voussoirs above them, and there are paired flights of steps leading to tall depressed arch doorways with deeply recessed doors.

The terrace includes full-height canted bay windows, some of which have pilastered mullions. The ground floor windows are mostly tripartite, the first-floor windows have ramped and lugged architraves, and the second-floor windows have recessed margins. The sash windows predominantly feature plate-glass glazing. A continuous band course runs between the floors at cill level on the first floor, and there is a main cornice and blocking course at the top. The building has axial stacks and slate roofs, along with good cast-iron railings featuring winged figures in the basement area and steps. Decorative cast-iron balconies that were supported on stone consoles and cast-iron brackets on the first floor have mostly been removed.

On the flank facing Lynedoch Place, there is a three-bay elevation with a recessed inner bay and a canted full-height window topped with a heavy mutule cornice and a plain parapet. The flank facing Park Street South has an advanced three-bay central block, with consoled first-floor windows and canted bay windows on the ground floor. Number 1 is broadly similar to the main terrace but has a corniced shallow doorpiece and single ground floor windows. Number 3 features a doorpiece with engaged column reveals. Numbers 13 and 14 were altered and extended by James Salmon Jnr around 1900, with Number 14 showcasing a first-floor painted tile fireplace with a marble surround and extensive Salmon woodwork.

The rear includes a billiard room and a basement library, which is now a restaurant, featuring Salmon's interior design and colored leaded glass. The other interiors boast good ceiling and cornice plasterwork, along with impressive cast-iron stair balusters.

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