24 Glynne Way is a Grade II listed building in the Flintshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 16 November 1994. Graveyard.
24 Glynne Way
- WRENN ID
- eastward-mantel-summer
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Flintshire
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 16 November 1994
- Type
- Graveyard
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
24 Glynne Way is an early 19th-century, two-storey terrace consisting of 14 cottages, each with one bay and paired entrances. The main facade features flush, uncoursed sandstone with tooled sandstone dressings. It has a continuous shallow-pitched slate roof with a coped and shaped gable on the west side and a plain eaves cornice. The contemporary twin square chimney stacks serving Nos 4 and 6 have moulded caps and are set on a square base, while the other chimney stacks are made of dark factory brick and are octagonal in shape. Each cottage retains its original door, which has three vertical panels and is accessed by two steps, although most have been replaced. The doorcases are plain and chamfered. No. 30 features a plain rectangular fanlight, and No. 4 has a wide, flat-arched cellar light. Each unit has single aligned ground and first-floor windows with two lights and two panes, with the upper windows being slightly narrower than the lower ones. All windows have plain chamfered lintels, cills, and reveals, although the cills are now painted. No. 30 also has a later three-light, six-pane ground floor window with a wooden, grained lintel, which is part of a late 19th-century remodelling for use as a saddlers' shop. The west gable includes stone mullioned windows on the ground and first floors, featuring three and two lights respectively, each with moulded and returned labels.
The rear elevations of the cottages, except for Nos 4-10, are made of red brick with dentilated eaves, and each has a later rear extension. Nos 4-10 are constructed entirely of sandstone, and a noticeable break between Nos 10 and 12 indicates that Nos 4-10 were built first, with the terrace later extended to the east in the same style. However, the time gap between the original construction of the four units and the subsequent additions was likely not long.
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
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- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
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