Survey Data

Reg No

50060370


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural, Artistic


Original Use

House


In Use As

House


Date

1890 - 1900


Coordinates

314808, 235895


Date Recorded

01/09/2014


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Terraced two-bay two-storey house, built c.1895, with single-height canted bay and shared pedimented gable with terracotta roundel to front (south) elevation, and having return to rear elevation. M-profile pitched artificial slate roof with red brick chimneystacks with yellow clay pots and cast-iron hopper with replacement uPVC downpipe. Red brick walls laid in Flemish bond with corbelled red brick eaves course, granite plinth course and terracotta panels to canted bay. Segmental-headed window openings with terracotta lintels, red brick reveals and granite sills having replacement uPVC windows to front elevation. Shouldered-arch door opening with terracotta lintel with egg-and-dart moulding and brick reveals, framed by brick pilasters with granite bases and foliate capitals supporting brick frieze and cornice having timber panelled door and plain over-light. Granite steps and tiled platform. Cast-iron railings set on granite plinth with matching cast-iron pedestrian gate to garden boundary to front. Cement-rendered outbuilding to rear site.

Appraisal

This well-built house is part of a group of two terraces made up of sixteen late nineteenth-century houses on the north side of the North Circular Road. The mechanisation of brick manufacture began in the nineteenth century and the brick and terracotta detailing used in the terrace are characteristic of its application in domestic architecture. The entrance is particularly well designed, with a recessed panelled timber door and over-light framed within a pilastered opening for architectural effect. The terrace's uniform roof-line is punctuated by pedimented gables. The North Circular Road was laid out in the 1780s to create convenient approaches to the city. It developed slowly over the following century with the far west and east ends developing last.