Green Edge is a Grade II* listed building in the Isle of Anglesey local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 23 September 1950. Terrace. 2 related planning applications.

Green Edge

WRENN ID
third-gallery-azure
Grade
II*
Local Planning Authority
Isle of Anglesey
Country
Wales
Date first listed
23 September 1950
Type
Terrace
Source
Cadw listing

Description

Green Edge is a late Georgian symmetrical 3-storey terrace of 12 bays, built as 3 reflected pairs of 2-bay houses. The central 4 bays are brought forward under a shallow pediment. The walls are pebble-dashed with rusticated quoins and covered by a hipped roof of large slates. Large transverse stone stacks flank the centre, with a smaller transverse stone stack set back from the right end and a stone stack set back in-line from the left end.

A hipped veranda with slate roof spans the full width of the front, supported on wooden posts with latticework infill and arched openings. The lower and middle storeys have 12-pane hornless sash windows. The upper storey has smaller 6-pane sashes, except the left-hand bay which is blind with painted glazing bars, and the bay set back from the right end (No 6), which has a 4-pane sash window set slightly higher beneath a gable.

Entrances are positioned in the inner bays of each pair of houses, set slightly further inward than the windows above, all with 4-pane overlights. No 1 has a panel door with flush lower panels and glazed upper panels. Nos 2 and 3 have panel doors with flush lower panels. Nos 4 and 5 have fielded panels over lower flush panels. No 6's entrance is in the end wall; in place of a doorway it has a sash window in its inner bay, in line with the upper storey windows.

The asymmetrical 4-bay right end wall is dominated by a wide full-height canted bay on its left side. This bay has 12-pane hornless sash windows in each facet in the lower and middle storeys, with 6-pane hornless sash in the right facet of the upper storey, a blind central facet with painted glazing bars, and a replacement window in the left facet. Other windows are 12-pane hornless sashes in the lower and middle storeys and shorter 6-pane sashes in the upper storey, except the bay left of centre which has a blind window with painted glazing bars. In the two central bays is a hipped lean-to porch of around 1900, spanning the original entrances to No 6 (the news and billiards room) and No 7. The porch has a single entrance with Tudor arch and sunk spandrels, flanked by 3-light windows with wooden mullions and transoms and leaded glazing. Half-lit doors to the right and left inside the porch, and a 2-light window in the right-hand return, have similar glazing.

The 2-window left end wall (No 1) is slightly splayed, with 12-pane horned sash windows in the lower and middle storeys and shorter 6-pane horned sash windows in the upper storey.

The rear elevation has mainly sash windows similar to the front. Each pair has a 2-storey gabled wing. The wing behind Nos 1 and 2 retains its original end stack, has replacement openings to No 1 (converted to a separate dwelling known as 1A) and sash windows to No 2. It has been further extended; 1A retains 16-pane and 9-pane hornless sashes. No 3 has replacement small-pane sashes in the rear wing. No 4 retains 12-pane hornless sashes in the upper storey and replacement window and door below. In No 5 the rear wing is a lean-to against the 3-storey No 7 in the end elevation. No 7 has a lower 2-storey rear wing with pebble-dashed walls, a roof of large slates, and middle-storey escape doors. On its left side, in line with the front elevation of No 7, is a 2-storey hipped lean-to with roof of small slates and small-pane horned sash windows.

Detailed Attributes

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