NatWest Bank, 5 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 Georgian Bank.
NatWest Bank, 5 Bulkeley Terrace
- WRENN ID
- guardian-cupola-bittern
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Isle of Anglesey
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 31 March 1967
- Type
- Bank
- Period
- Georgian
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
A late-Georgian style terrace of three storeys arranged in three bays, comprising Nos 4-8 Bulkeley Terrace and No 1 Raglan Street. The buildings are pebble-dashed with smooth-rendered architraves, sill and head bands, except for No 4 which is finished in scribed roughcast painted cream. The slate roof is hipped to the left over No 8, with added skylights and brick and roughcast ridge stacks, plus two stacks at the left end.
Windows are predominantly 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 has its entrance to the right, with a recessed panelled door and overlight. Window surrounds have stopped chamfers; in the lower storey, the top row of panes in each window has been replaced by a single pane. The rear elevation is rendered with moulded architraves and pediments on consoles to the lower and middle-storey windows. The left-hand entrance has a plain architrave and pediment, with a half-lit panelled door and overlight dating from the late 19th or early 20th century.
No 5 features a 20th-century shop front framed by Tuscan pilasters, with a fascia bearing a modern sign and a moulded cornice. A replaced panelled door stands to the left, with small-pane windows to the centre and right, the latter probably occupying a former doorway position. The rear elevation is rendered with moulded architraves to the lower and middle storeys and a middle-storey sill band. Three ground-floor windows appear in the rear, the narrower left-hand window being a former doorway, with replacement horned sashes fitted.
No 6 has its entrance in the right-hand bay, comprising a panel door with fielded upper panels, overlight, and a painted freestone surround with stopped chamfers. Windows are replacement sashes. The rear entrance is on the left side, also in a painted freestone surround with stopped chamfers, a moulded cornice on consoles, and a circa 1900 half-glazed door with overlight. The rear elevation is rendered with moulded architraves in the lower and middle storeys and a middle-storey sill band.
No 7 has a panelled door to the left with fielded upper panels and overlight, set in a painted freestone surround with stopped chamfers. The basement features a segmental-headed window. The rear elevation is pebble-dashed with smooth-rendered keyed architraves in the lower and middle storeys and plain architraves in the upper storey. The entrance in the right-hand bay has a panel door and round-headed overlight in a plain architrave, beneath a moulded cornice on head corbels.
No 8 occupies a corner site and houses a shop front (Gabriela) in the lower storey. The Castle Street elevation displays a plain shop window framed by simple pilasters, with fascia and moulded cornice (a modern sign has been added). The entrance is located in the splayed corner and has a replacement half-glazed door under a hood mould. The main angle of the building is deeply chamfered in the middle storey. The left side wall, to Raglan Street, has a similar shop window, with a half-glazed door under a round-headed overlight further left (No 1 Raglan Street). Above are central hornless sash windows, 12-pane in the middle storey and 9-pane in the upper storey, flanked by blind windows. The rear elevation is pebble-dashed with smooth-rendered architraves and lower and middle storey sill bands, with a fielded-panel door to the left under a round-headed overlight.
The rear elevations of all houses share the same basic three-bay structure with 12-pane hornless sashes in lower and middle storeys and shorter 9-pane sashes in the upper storey with blind central window. The basement storey throughout is painted dressed stone with altered openings.
Detailed Attributes
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