4 Rectory Lane is a Grade II listed building in the Flintshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 16 November 1994. Cottage.
4 Rectory Lane
- WRENN ID
- steep-parapet-cedar
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Flintshire
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 16 November 1994
- Type
- Cottage
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
4 Rectory Lane is a two-storey terrace of three cottages built in the early 20th century in the Garden City style. The cottages feature a medium-pitched tile roof with part-rendered and part-brick stacks that have simple mouldings and dentilation. The eaves are plain with exposed rafters, and the facade is nearly symmetrical, finished in pebble-dash with a Ruabon brick plinth that reaches up to the ground floor cill level. The upper floor slightly oversails the lower, and there is a central storeyed and gabled porch for No. 4, which is coped and topped with ball finials and simple moulded kneelers. A moulded plaque in the gable displays the date 1913 and has a returned label. Beneath this is a glazed oculus with nine panes and radiating key stones, all detailing done in reconstituted stone.
The entrance features a flat, moulded canopy supported by moulded wooden brackets. It has a recessed four-panel door with the upper panels glazed. On either side of the entrance are flush, splayed buttresses. The flanking bays have projecting casement windows; the first-floor windows consist of 12 panes, while the ground-floor windows are tripartite, with a central arched section of 12 panes and flanking sections of six panes. Heavily-moulded hoods are present throughout. At the first-floor level, large projecting gables are supported by wooden brackets, and there is decorative timber framing with moulded eaves brackets and exposed purlins. The tripartite casement windows have three sections of six panes. The ground floor features canted bays with cross windows, displaying six and four panes at the top and nine and six at the bottom, with brick cills.
To the right is the entrance to No. 3, which is similar but has a modern door, with a double casement window above. To the left, No. 5 has an entrance and an offset window similar to the others, with a double casement window above. At the rear, No. 3 has three stepped-down gables, the last of which is single storey.
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