Reg No
50100310
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Artistic
Original Use
House
In Use As
Public house
Date
1770 - 1910
Coordinates
316638, 233805
Date Recorded
07/06/2016
Date Updated
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Corner-sited two-bay four-storey former house, built c. 1790, having four-bay side (east) elevation, and slightly lower three-storey flat-roofed return. Now in use as public house, with pubfront of c. 1910. M-profile pitched slate roof with two gables to east (side) elevation, behind parapet with painted masonry copings, parapet gutters; replacement uPVC downpipes. Painted rendered walling, with section of painted tongue-and-groove timber cladding to ground floor of side elevation. Square-headed window openings, diminishing in height to upper floors, having rendered reveals and painted masonry sills. Recent one-over-one pane timber sliding sash windows with ogee horns, and with single replacement uPVC window to east side of return. pubfront has wraparound fascia with hand-painted signage and leaded cornice, over Adamesque Ionic columns flanking square-headed openings with timber display windows having nail-headed painted masonry aprons, projecting plinth course, east windows recessed and concealed behind painted timber-sheeted shutters. Square-headed door openings to main block and segmental-headed to return, latter with projecting rendered architrave and keystone; double-leaf timber doors with nail-headed panels; recessed openings to east accessed by recent tiled steps. Steel trapdoor over basement opening to east elevation. Recent awning over ground floor to south elevation; recent hand-painted and fixed signage to east elevation. Building interlinked with No. 39 to west.
A late eighteenth-century former house featuring a good late nineteenth century pubfront. Despite successive alterations and a general loss of historic fabric, the original proportions remain across the upper floors of the main south elevation, while the pubfront is intact, with fine Adamesque Ionic columns. Located on a prominent corner site, the building constitutes an important focal point in the streetscape and contributes to the historic and varied character of Fenian Street. Fenian Street was originally named Hamilton's Row.