1 Bulkeley Terrace is a Grade II listed building in the Isle of Anglesey local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 20 February 1978. House.
1 Bulkeley Terrace
- WRENN ID
- upper-finial-kestrel
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Isle of Anglesey
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 20 February 1978
- Type
- House
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
A terrace of three late-Georgian style 3-storey houses facing Castle Street, with a slate roof hipped to the right, 2 roughcast stacks and a central brick stack. A plinth of tooled stone incorporates basement windows set in lightwells.
Number 3 is a 3-bay shop and house with rusticated quoins and smooth-rendered architraves. In the lower storey, the shop front on the right is framed by pilasters with raised fields beneath a deep cornice on cast iron brackets. A plain shop window has a painted panel above the transom, and to its left is a recessed half-glazed door under a pivoting overlight. Further left is the house entrance, with slate steps and a recessed half-glazed panelled door under a small-pane overlight. To its left is a 12-pane hornless sash window above a segmental-headed basement sash window. The middle storey has 12-pane hornless sash windows, and the upper storey has shorter 9-pane hornless sashes.
Numbers 1 and 2 are 2-bay with roughcast walls painted cream. Number 2 has smooth-rendered architraves to 12-pane hornless sashes and shorter 9-pane upper-storey sashes. The entrance, in an eared architrave in the left-hand bay, has a panelled door with fielded upper panels and plain overlight, with slate steps; the basement has a replacement window. Number 1 has blind windows in the right-hand bay and 12-pane and 9-pane hornless sash windows similar to Numbers 2 and 3, with replacement basement windows in each bay. The entrance is in the right side wall to Alma Street. On the left side of the elevation is a fielded-panel door under a plain overlight with slate steps. Above it are stair windows: a 12-pane sash window in the middle storey and a replacement small-pane top-hung casement in the upper storey. A further replacement basement window is on the right side.
In the rear elevation facing the sea front, Numbers 1 and 2 have 2-storey canted bay windows added in the early 20th century, with replacement French doors in the lower storey and a 2-light window above. The upper storey has 2 small-pane top-hung casements in each house. On the left side of the lower storey are steps to the basement.
Number 3 has a scribed render wall painted white to the rear. It has a single bay in line with Numbers 1 and 2, and 2 bays brought forward in line with Numbers 4–8. The left-hand bay has eared architraves with cornices and shaped pediments to 12-pane hornless sash windows in the lower and middle storeys and a 9-pane hornless sash window in the upper storey. The side wall of the central bay has a circa 1900 open wooden hipped lean-to porch of 3 bays by a single bay, with 4-centred arches and latticework dado, leading to a half-glazed panelled door and overlight, with a small window to the right. The main elevation has a replacement 2-light margin-lit window in the lower storey, 12-pane hornless sashes in the middle storey all in eared architraves with cornices and shaped pediments, and 9-pane hornless sash windows in the upper storey. On the left side are stone steps to the basement, which has altered openings.
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