4 Bulkeley Terrace is a Grade II listed building in the Isle of Anglesey local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 31 March 1967. A Late Georgian Terrace houses.

4 Bulkeley Terrace

WRENN ID
carved-gravel-grain
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Isle of Anglesey
Country
Wales
Date first listed
31 March 1967
Type
Terrace houses
Source
Cadw listing

Description

4 Bulkeley Terrace is part of a late-Georgian style terrace comprising 4-8 Bulkeley Terrace and 1 Raglan Street. It is a 3-storey, 3-bay house with pebble-dashing and smooth-rendered architraves, sill and head bands, except for No 4 which is finished in scribed roughcast painted cream. The building sits beneath a slate roof hipped to the left over No 8, with added skylights and brick and roughcast ridge stacks and 2 stacks at the left end.

The windows throughout are mainly 12-pane hornless sashes in the lower and middle storeys, with shorter 9-pane hornless sashes in the upper storey. The central bays of each house feature blind middle and upper-storey windows.

No 4 specifically has its entrance to the right, with a recessed panelled door and overlight. The windows have surrounds with stopped chamfers, and in the lower storey the top row of panes has been replaced by a single pane. The rear elevation is rendered and has moulded architraves with pediments on consoles to the lower and middle-storey windows. The left-hand entrance at the rear has a plain architrave and pediment, with a half-lit panelled door and overlight dating from the late 19th or early 20th century.

The adjoining houses (Nos 5-8) share the same 3-bay structure. No 5 features a 20th-century shop front framed by Tuscan pilasters with a fascia and modern sign, with a replaced panelled door to the left. No 6 has a panel door with fielded upper panels and overlight in a painted freestone surround with stopped chamfers. No 7 has a similar panelled door with fielded upper panels and overlight, also in a painted freestone surround with stopped chamfers, and a basement window with a segmental head. No 8 occupies a corner site with a shop front on the lower storey, a plain shop window to Castle Street framed by simple pilasters, and the main angle deeply chamfered in the middle storey.

Detailed Attributes

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