Reg No
50010829
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Artistic
Original Use
House
In Use As
Office
Date
1870 - 1890
Coordinates
315859, 235576
Date Recorded
13/09/2011
Date Updated
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Terraced two-bay three-storey house over raised basement, built c.1880, set back from street and built as one of three identical houses with garden to front. Now in use as youth theatre. M-profile slate roof with roll-moulded black clay ridge tiles and shared corbelled red brick chimneystacks with clay pots to both party walls. Ogee-moulded cast-iron guttering to moulded red brick eaves course and cast-iron downpipe. Red brick walls laid in Flemish bond on granite plinth course over rendered basement walls. Gauged brick segmental-headed window openings with granite sills and one-over-one pane timber sliding sash windows throughout. Aediculed ground floor window with slender panelled pilasters and scrolled foliate console brackets supporting cornice. Gauged brick segmental-headed door opening with timber doorcase. Original flat-panelled timber door with bolection mouldings and central fillet flanked by panelled pilasters and scrolled foliate console brackets to lintel cornice and plain fanlight. Door opens onto granite platform and eight granite steps with original cast-iron handrail opening onto concrete tiled footpath. Front garden enclosed by cast-iron railing on painted granite plinth wall and cast-iron gate on pair of decorative cast-iron gate posts.
Built as one of three identical dwellings, this Victorian townhouse forms part of a terrace that stands out from the remainder of the street for being set back from the street edge, and having machined red brick walls. The house retains many of its original features including all façade details and its original doorcase. The retention of timber sash windows enhances the architectural heritage quality of the building and the window surround to the ground floor, together with the doorcase, provides a decorative focus to the facade. Gardiner Street Upper was laid out in 1790, however, these three houses where not built until after 1876. The terrace and gardens reflect the rise in prosperity of the middle classes in the later nineteenth century, following a lull in development after the Act of Union, and add considerable variety to a largely Georgian streetscape.