Shops and houses, forming east front of covered market. 1835 by John Dobson for
Richard Grainger. Sandstone ashlar; Welsh slate roof. 4 storeys, 46 bays in all;
symmetrical. End bays of central group contain market entrances. Giant Corinthian
pilasters to 3-bay end pavilions, and to these entrance bays, above C20 shops.
Plain reveals to sash windows on upper floors; some have glazing bars; second
floor has aprons and slightly projecting sills; architraves with bracketed cornices
to first-floor sashes above market entrances. Second-floor band and dentilled
cornice. Top cornice, with parapet and pilasters, some with acroteria, to central
and end groups; with blocking course to intermediate bays. Mid C20 canopy to most
shops. One-bay returns complete the composition of Nos. 1 to 37 Nelson Street
(q.v.) and Nos. 1-25 Nun Street (q.v.). LISTED GRADE 1
Site Type: Broad
Shopping Parade
SITEDESC
Shops and houses, forming east front of covered market. 1835 by John Dobson for
Richard Grainger. Sandstone ashlar; Welsh slate roof. 4 storeys, 46 bays in all;
symmetrical. End bays of central group contain market entrances. Giant Corinthian
pilasters to 3-bay end pavilions, and to these entrance bays, above C20 shops.
Plain reveals to sash windows on upper floors; some have glazing bars; second
floor has aprons and slightly projecting sills; architraves with bracketed cornices
to first-floor sashes above market entrances. Second-floor band and dentilled
cornice. Top cornice, with parapet and pilasters, some with acroteria, to central
and end groups; with blocking course to intermediate bays. Mid C20 canopy to most
shops. One-bay returns complete the composition of Nos. 1 to 37 Nelson Street
(q.v.) and Nos. 1-25 Nun Street (q.v.).
Site Name
95 to 137 Grainger Street
Site Type: Specific
Shopping Parade
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade I
HER Number
9170
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural and Historic Interest, 20/258
YEAR1
2006
English, British
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Commercial
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
COMP2
Claire MacRae
DAY1
17
DAY2
19
District
Newcastle
Easting
424650
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26SW
MATERIAL
Ashlar
MONTH1
10
MONTH2
10
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
564010
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Newcastle
Description
Bank. 1862-3 by J.E. Watson. Sandstone ashlar with Welsh slate roof. Classical
style. 2 storeys, 5:3:5 bays and 3 in left return. Pedimented centre has double
door and overlight; rusticated piers to ground floor arcade, with round-headed
windows under modillioned cornice. First floor has central balcony and engaged
Ionic Order supporting pediment with motto INDUSTRY under beehive and cornucopia;
round-headed windows; modillioned cornice and pediment. Top balustrade. Hipped
roof. Left return in similar style has arms of Newcastle in pediment. LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
Bank (Financial)
SITEDESC
National Savings Bank. 1862-3 by John E. Watson. Sandstone ashlar with Welsh slate roof. Classical style. 2 storeys, 5:3:5 bays and 3 in left return. Pedimented centre has double door and overlight; rusticated piers to ground floor arcade, with round-headed windows under modillioned cornice. First floor has central balcony and engaged Ionic Order supporting pediment with motto INDUSTRY under beehive and cornucopia; round-headed windows; modillioned cornice and pediment. Top balustrade. Hipped roof. Left return in similar style has arms of Newcastle in pediment {1}. Newcastle's coat of arms (two seahorses bearing a shield) is shown in the pediment fronting Westgate Road {2}. Facades only survive as building collapsed during renovation circa 2002. Grainger Street had not been constucted when this building was erected - a formal frontage was created onto Grainger Street but the main entrace was created on Westgate Road. Now the Milecastle Public House.
Site Name
19 to 25 Grainger Street (Trustees Savings)
Site Type: Specific
Bank (Financial)
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
9169
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural and Historic Interest, 20/255; Paul Usherwood, Jeremy Beach and Catherine Morris, 2000, Public Sculpture of North-East England, p 115-6; Grace McCombie, 2009, Newcastle and Gateshead - Pevsner Architectural Guide, p. 21, 160
YEAR1
2006
YEAR2
2015
English, British
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area, Register of Parks and Gardens Grade II
Class
Religious Ritual and Funerary
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
Crossref
5007
DAY1
17
District
Newcastle
Easting
425670
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26NE
MATERIAL
Ashlar
MONTH1
10
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565510
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Jesmond
Description
Broken obelisk tomb. Circa 1841. Memorial, to Joseph Wilson, composer of popular
Tyneside songs, died 1841. Sandstone ashlar; base inscribed with verse in dialect. LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
Tomb
SITEDESC
Broken obelisk tomb. Circa 1841. Memorial, to Joseph Wilson, composer of popular
Tyneside songs, died 1841. Sandstone ashlar; base inscribed with verse in dialect.
Site Name
Newcastle General Cemetery, Joseph Wilson tomb
Site Type: Specific
Tomb
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
9168
Form of Evidence
Structure
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural and Historic Interest, 9/342
YEAR1
2006
English, British
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area, Scheduled Monument
Class
Transport
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
COMP2
Rachel Grahame
Crossref
1186
DAY1
17
DAY2
22
District
Newcastle
Easting
425040
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26SE
MATERIAL
Ashlar
MONTH1
10
MONTH2
5
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563890
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Newcastle
Description
This structure was listed Grade II in 1987 with the following description:
'Railway viaduct. 1849 for Newcastle York and Berwick railway and 1890-94 for North- Eastern Railway. Sandstone ashlar with 6 brick arches. North elevation rusticated; band at railbed level; coped parapet; wide pilasters; voussoirs to arches. South elevation of plain ashlar has vermiculate frieze below rail-bed- level cornice.'
McCombie - the 1849 viaduct was doubled in the 1890s and Dog Leap Stairs had to be re-sited. LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
Railway Transport Site
SITEDESC
This structure was listed Grade II in 1987 with the following description:
'Railway viaduct. 1849 for Newcastle York and Berwick railway and 1890-94 for North- Eastern Railway. Sandstone ashlar with 6 brick arches. North elevation rusticated; band at railbed level; coped parapet; wide pilasters; voussoirs to arches. South elevation of plain ashlar has vermiculate frieze below rail-bed- level cornice.'
McCombie - the 1849 viaduct was doubled in the 1890s and Dog Leap Stairs had to be re-sited.
Site Name
Castle Garth, railway viaduct
Site Type: Specific
Railway Viaduct
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
9167
Form of Evidence
Structure
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural and Historic Interest, 24/149; Grace McCombie, 2009, Newcastle and Gateshead - Pevsner Architectural Guide, p. 118; https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1355239
YEAR1
2006
YEAR2
2024
English, British
Class
Religious Ritual and Funerary
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
17
District
Newcastle
Easting
423180
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26SW
MATERIAL
Sandstone
MONTH1
10
Grid Reference
NZ
NMRNUMBER
NZ 26 SW 265
Northing
563220
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Newcastle
Description
Parish church, declared redundant lst January 1984. 1868 by Johnson. Snecked
sandstone with ashlar dressings; Welsh slate roof with stone gable copings.
Aisled nave with north-west tower and low west porch; north transept; chancel
with north aisle. Decorated style. 3-stage tower over aisle has triple belfry
openings, corbel table, and battlements with corner flying buttresses to
tall octagonal stone spire with lucarnes. West porch has shafts and label
strings to square-headed central window and flanking doors; high aisle
windows, boarded up in north and west and with bar tracery on south; larger
east window also boarded up. Steeply-pitched roofs to nave and aisles.
Interior: stripped except for alabaster memorials in memory of members of
the Cruddas family and mosaic after Holman Hunt "Light of the World" in memory
of Rev. Joseph Duncan, vicar 1901-11. Glass removed. LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
Place of Worship
SITEDESC
Parish church, declared redundant lst January 1984. 1868 by Johnson. Snecked sandstone with ashlar dressings; Welsh slate roof with stone gable copings. Aisled nave with north-west tower and low west porch; north transept; chancel with north aisle. Decorated style. 3-stage tower over aisle has triple belfry openings, corbel table, and battlements with corner flying buttresses to tall octagonal stone spire with lucarnes. West porch has shafts and label strings to square-headed central window and flanking doors; high aisle windows, boarded up in north and west and with bar tracery on south; larger east window also boarded up. Steeply-pitched roofs to nave and aisles.
Interior: stripped except for alabaster memorials in memory of members of the Cruddas family and mosaic after Holman Hunt "Light of the World" in memory of Rev. Joseph Duncan, vicar 1901-11. Glass removed.
Site Name
Brunel Terrace, Church of St. Stephen
Site Type: Specific
Parish Church
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
9166
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural and Historic Interest, 11/134
YEAR1
2006
English, British
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Health and Welfare
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
Crossref
4876
DAY1
17
District
Newcastle
Easting
425380
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26SE
MATERIAL
Brick
MONTH1
10
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563980
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Newcastle
Description
Former Almshouses, now offices and bar. Dated 1782 on panel. Painted brick;
Welsh slate roof. 2 storeys, 6 bays. Double door with four beaded panels
under 4-pane overlight central in each 3 bays, with pointed hoods above.
Tripartite sash windows with glazing bars in wide boxes have brick lintels,
those on ground floor with semicircular centre painted in imitation of
Venetian window. Blind windows above doors painted trompe l'oeil. Central
panel on first floor names officers in 1782 when houses built. Interior
shows cast iron kitchen ranges with floral decoration, by Heppell's foundry;
2-panelled doors throughout. Probably Trinity House property since C16, LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
Almshouse
SITEDESC
Former Almshouses, later offices and bar. Dated 1782 on panel. Painted brick;
Welsh slate roof. 2 storeys, 6 bays. Double door with four beaded panels
under 4-pane overlight central in each 3 bays, with pointed hoods above.
Tripartite sash windows with glazing bars in wide boxes have brick lintels,
those on ground floor with semicircular centre painted in imitation of
Venetian window. Blind windows above doors painted trompe l'oeil. Central
panel on first floor names officers in 1782 when houses built. Interior
shows cast iron kitchen ranges with floral decoration, by Heppell's foundry;
2-panelled doors throughout. Probably Trinity House property since C16. Now occupied by Live Theatre.
Site Name
7 and 8 Broad Chare, Trinity House
Site Type: Specific
Almshouse
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
9165
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural and Historic Interest, 24/130; Grace McCombie, 2009, Newcastle and Gateshead - Pevsner Architectural Guide, p 127
YEAR1
2006
English, British
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Commercial
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
17
District
Newcastle
Easting
425380
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26SE
MATERIAL
Brick
MONTH1
10
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563990
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Place
Newcastle
Description
2 Warehouses, now museum. Circa 1840 for Trinity House, Newcastle. 4 storeys,
7 bays. English garden wall bond brick; Welsh slate roof. Later C19 shop
fronts inserted and vehicle entrance at left altered. Bricked-up loading
bays on all floors in third and seventh bays. Segmental brick arches
and projecting stone sills to barred 2-light windows. Part of the property
of Trinity House (q.v.). LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
Warehouse
SITEDESC
2 Warehouses, now museum. Circa 1840 for Trinity House, Newcastle. 4 storeys,
7 bays. English garden wall bond brick; Welsh slate roof. Later C19 shop
fronts inserted and vehicle entrance at left altered. Bricked-up loading
bays on all floors in third and seventh bays. Segmental brick arches
and projecting stone sills to barred 2-light windows. Part of the property
of Trinity House (q.v.).
Site Name
29 Broad Chare
Site Type: Specific
Warehouse
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
9164
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural and Historic Interest, 21/124 and 24/124;
YEAR1
2006
English, British
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
17
District
Newcastle
Easting
425120
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26NE
MATERIAL
Ashlar
MONTH1
10
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565630
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Brandling Village
Description
Terrace of houses. Circa 1823. Sandstone ashlar with Welsh slate roofs; some
chimneys rendered. 2 storeys with some attics; 25 bays in all. Plain surrounds
and flat stone lintels to doors except to Nos 44, 45 and 46 at right, which
have flat Tuscan doorcases. Nos. 38 and 39 flank elliptical-arched passageway
with Tuscan surround; raised surround to window above passage. Flat stone
lintels to sashes, some with glazing bars; ground floor sill band and first
floor projecting stone sills. Some ground floor alterations. Gutter cornice
and blocking course. No. 34 at left has panel with raised lettering
JESSAMINE PLACE. Rear of No. 33 has quoin inscribed DES PIERRE / 1823 /
TRIOMPHANT. (sic) LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
Terrace
SITEDESC
Terrace of houses. Circa 1823. Sandstone ashlar with Welsh slate roofs; some
chimneys rendered. 2 storeys with some attics; 25 bays in all. Plain surrounds
and flat stone lintels to doors except to Nos 44, 45 and 46 at right, which
have flat Tuscan doorcases. Nos. 38 and 39 flank elliptical-arched passageway
with Tuscan surround; raised surround to window above passage. Flat stone
lintels to sashes, some with glazing bars; ground floor sill band and first
floor projecting stone sills. Some ground floor alterations. Gutter cornice
and blocking course. No. 34 at left has panel with raised lettering
JESSAMINE PLACE. Rear of No. 33 has quoin inscribed DES PIERRE / 1823 /
TRIOMPHANT. (sic) Unusually built in stone when the common suburban tradition at that time was brick. The other terraces in Brandling Village are brick. The stone was probably quarried on site.
Site Name
34 to 46 Brandling Place South
Site Type: Specific
Terrace
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
9163
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural and Historic Interest, 9/121; Grace McCombie, 2009, Newcastle and Gateshead - Pevsner Architectural Guide, p. 20
YEAR1
2006
English, British
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
COMP2
Rachel Grahame
DAY1
17
DAY2
23
District
Newcastle
Easting
424990
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26NW
MATERIAL
Brick
MONTH1
10
MONTH2
2
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565730
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Brandling Village
Description
33 Brandling Park is Grade II listed with the following description:
Details
House and attached garden wall, 1820s.
MATERIALS: English bond hand-made brick with ashlar dressings and plinth; Welsh slate roof with flat stone gable coping.
PLAN: end of terrace house with a central staircase plan.
EXTERIOR: the main west-facing elevation has two storeys plus attic and a partial basement, and three bays beneath a pitched roof with a renewed left end brick chimneystack and three velux windows. There is a stone eaves cornice, sill band and plinth. Window openings have early C21 uPVC horned sash frames. The central six-panelled door and fanlight with glazing bars has deep reveals beneath a round-headed brick arch. There are wedge stone lintels and a sill band to the flanking wide sash windows; that to the left has been enlarged to two-lights, each fitted with six-over-six sashes. That to the right has an eight-over-eight sash. The three irregularly-spaced first floor windows have wedge stone lintels and projecting stone sills and six-over-six sash windows. The left return forming the end of terrace is blind, with the exception of a second floor window. The rear elevation has scattered fenestration including a stair window: all openings have wedge lintels, projecting sills and early C21 uPVC horned sash window frames. An original ground floor window has been enlarged to two lights, and there is a pair of C21 roof dormers with uPVC window frames. To the left end there is an original early C19 projecting two-storey range with a pitched roof of slate (the ground floor converted to a garage) and to the right end a two-storey, flat-roofed range, original to the ground floor with a later C20 first floor. The later C20 first floor of the right end range, the early C21 single-storey extensions to both the left and right ranges, the linking modern brick walling forming a series of garages and the C21 porch are not of special interest and are not included in the listing.
INTERIOR: doors throughout are mostly original six-panel with original door furniture, exposed floors have wide floor boards and chimney pieces are mostly simple early C19 forms with blocks to the angles and rectangular headed, cast-iron hob grates. The main entrance leads to a small vestibule opening, through a four-panel door (upper parts glazed) with rectangular fanlight, into a short hall, both with simple plaster cornices. To either side are two principal reception rooms entered through six-panel doors with reeded architraves and block angles. The front, south, room has an identical architrave to the inner side of the door and also to the window, a panelled dado with a fluted cornice, a moulded plaster cornice and a later C19 chimney piece. The front north room has an original early C19 timber fireplace with arched hob grate and a moulded plaster cornice. The enlarged window overlooking the garden has a replacement plain architrave. The east wall of this room has been pierced by a substantial arch, opening into the rear north room, with modern kitchen fittings, which opens into the ground floor of the rear range, now utility room. The rear south room opens off a small stair hall, and retains an early C19 timber chimney piece with reeded jambs and lintel, and to the right a round-headed alcove. The ceiling rose and cornice are modern.
The simple stair hall has a timber stair arch supported on slim pilasters and a door giving access to the cellar; the latter reached by stone steps (clad with plywood), is divided into compartments, one with stone cellar shelving. The dog-leg open-string stair has simple stick balusters, turned newel posts (some double) and a mahogany hand rail and panelled dado. The stair rises through the first floor to the attic. The principal bedroom retains a moulded cornice, three-panel shutters to the windows and a marble chimney piece with arched hob grate. The second bedroom retains a simple early C19 wooden chimney piece and similar shutters; a modern ensuite bathroom occupies the first floor of the original rear range. A third bedroom retains a similar chimney piece and a reeded architrave with block angles. There is a further bedroom and two further bathrooms to this floor. The attic retains a cast-iron chimney piece, and partially exposed roof trusses with single purlins.
SITEASS
Incorrectly listed as No. 32 on 30 March 1987. Amended to No. 33 on 27 September 2017.
Site Type: Broad
House
SITEDESC
33 Brandling Park is Grade II listed with the following description:
Details
House and attached garden wall, 1820s.
MATERIALS: English bond hand-made brick with ashlar dressings and plinth; Welsh slate roof with flat stone gable coping.
PLAN: end of terrace house with a central staircase plan.
EXTERIOR: the main west-facing elevation has two storeys plus attic and a partial basement, and three bays beneath a pitched roof with a renewed left end brick chimneystack and three velux windows. There is a stone eaves cornice, sill band and plinth. Window openings have early C21 uPVC horned sash frames. The central six-panelled door and fanlight with glazing bars has deep reveals beneath a round-headed brick arch. There are wedge stone lintels and a sill band to the flanking wide sash windows; that to the left has been enlarged to two-lights, each fitted with six-over-six sashes. That to the right has an eight-over-eight sash. The three irregularly-spaced first floor windows have wedge stone lintels and projecting stone sills and six-over-six sash windows. The left return forming the end of terrace is blind, with the exception of a second floor window. The rear elevation has scattered fenestration including a stair window: all openings have wedge lintels, projecting sills and early C21 uPVC horned sash window frames. An original ground floor window has been enlarged to two lights, and there is a pair of C21 roof dormers with uPVC window frames. To the left end there is an original early C19 projecting two-storey range with a pitched roof of slate (the ground floor converted to a garage) and to the right end a two-storey, flat-roofed range, original to the ground floor with a later C20 first floor. The later C20 first floor of the right end range, the early C21 single-storey extensions to both the left and right ranges, the linking modern brick walling forming a series of garages and the C21 porch are not of special interest and are not included in the listing.
INTERIOR: doors throughout are mostly original six-panel with original door furniture, exposed floors have wide floor boards and chimney pieces are mostly simple early C19 forms with blocks to the angles and rectangular headed, cast-iron hob grates. The main entrance leads to a small vestibule opening, through a four-panel door (upper parts glazed) with rectangular fanlight, into a short hall, both with simple plaster cornices. To either side are two principal reception rooms entered through six-panel doors with reeded architraves and block angles. The front, south, room has an identical architrave to the inner side of the door and also to the window, a panelled dado with a fluted cornice, a moulded plaster cornice and a later C19 chimney piece. The front north room has an original early C19 timber fireplace with arched hob grate and a moulded plaster cornice. The enlarged window overlooking the garden has a replacement plain architrave. The east wall of this room has been pierced by a substantial arch, opening into the rear north room, with modern kitchen fittings, which opens into the ground floor of the rear range, now utility room. The rear south room opens off a small stair hall, and retains an early C19 timber chimney piece with reeded jambs and lintel, and to the right a round-headed alcove. The ceiling rose and cornice are modern.
The simple stair hall has a timber stair arch supported on slim pilasters and a door giving access to the cellar; the latter reached by stone steps (clad with plywood), is divided into compartments, one with stone cellar shelving. The dog-leg open-string stair has simple stick balusters, turned newel posts (some double) and a mahogany hand rail and panelled dado. The stair rises through the first floor to the attic. The principal bedroom retains a moulded cornice, three-panel shutters to the windows and a marble chimney piece with arched hob grate. The second bedroom retains a simple early C19 wooden chimney piece and similar shutters; a modern ensuite bathroom occupies the first floor of the original rear range. A third bedroom retains a similar chimney piece and a reeded architrave with block angles. There is a further bedroom and two further bathrooms to this floor. The attic retains a cast-iron chimney piece, and partially exposed roof trusses with single purlins.
Site Name
33 Brandling Park
Site Type: Specific
Terraced House
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
9162
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural and Historic Interest, 8/117; https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1355234
YEAR1
2006
YEAR2
2022
English, British
AREA_STAT
Conservation Area
Class
Domestic
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
17
District
Newcastle
Easting
424990
Grid ref figure
8
Map Sheet
NZ26NW
MATERIAL
Brick
MONTH1
10
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565640
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Hanoverian 1714 to 1837
Place
Brandling Village
Description
House. Early C19. English bond brick, with ashlar basement and dressings;
graduated Lakeland slate roof. Basement, 2 storeys and attic; 2 bays. Steps
up to 6-panelled door and overlight in panelled surround with cornice. Inserted
bow window at left. Sashes above have wedge stone lintels, projecting stone sills
and fine glazing bars. Eaves band and gutter cornice. LISTED GRADE 2
Site Type: Broad
House
SITEDESC
House. Early C19. English bond brick, with ashlar basement and dressings; graduated Lakeland slate roof. Basement, 2 storeys and attic; 2 bays. Steps up to 6-panelled door and overlight in panelled surround with cornice. Inserted bow window at left. Sashes above have wedge stone lintels, projecting stone sills and fine glazing bars. Eaves band and gutter cornice.
Site Name
21 Brandling Park
Site Type: Specific
House
SITE_STAT
Listed Building Grade II
HER Number
9161
Form of Evidence
Extant Building
Sources
Department of National Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural and Historic Interest, 8/115