Survey Data

Reg No

50930182


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural, Artistic


Original Use

House


In Use As

Apartment/flat (converted)


Date

1860 - 1865


Coordinates

316819, 233077


Date Recorded

29/09/2015


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

End-of-terrace two-bay four-storey former townhouse over basement, built 1864, with single-storey over basement hip-roofed return to rear (south) elevation. Now in use as flats. M-profile pitched roof, hipped to west, with shouldered buff brick chimneystack to east party wall with replacement clay pots. Roof concealed behind brick parapet (rebuilt to rear), with granite coping, concealed gutters and cast-iron hopper and downpipe to rear. Red brick walling with wigged pointing, laid in Flemish bond, with ruled-and-lined rendered walling to basement having granite stringcourse. Buff brick walling to rear (south) elevation, laid to English garden wall bond. Square-headed window openings with granite sills, brick reveals (patent to rear) and brick voussoirs; openings diminishing to upper floors. Timber sliding sash windows with convex horns throughout, one-over-one to ground and first floors, two-over-two to upper floors and eight-over-eight to basement with metal grille affixed. Those to rear six-over-six to second floor and three-over-three to third floor. Decorative cast-iron balconettes fixed to sills of first floor window openings to north. Round-headed door opening to western bay of principal elevation with brick voussoirs, moulded linings and Neo-classical doorcase comprising fluted Doric columns rising to moulded cornice over frieze with replacement plain glass fanlight over four-panelled timber door with brass furniture. Concrete rendered entrance platform with two granite steps to street flanked by cast-iron railings with decorative finials and corner posts on granite plinth, enclosing basement well to east. Square-headed door opening located beneath entrance platform with sidelight (appears metal-framed). Street fronted on the south side of Baggot Street Lower, abutted by similar earlier terraces to the west and a mock-Georgian terrace, built 1989, to the east.

Appraisal

The cohesive terrace of Nos. 88-90 (50930182-4) was built in 1864 and contains some of the last of the Georgian-style townhouses to be completed on the street. Distinguished by a higher parapet level, single and twin-paned sashes and the striking red brick façade, the terrace is set apart from many of the earlier terraces which line the south side of Baggot Street Lower. Such discrepancies between neighbouring groups is indicative of the speculative nature of its development . Baggot Street, as it became known in 1773, is an ancient route from the city which was named after the manor granted to Robert Bagod in the thirteenth-century, called Baggotrath. Developed on Fitzwilliam’s land during the late-eighteenth century, construction of the street progressed slowly due to the economic recession of the 1790s; the area to the west of Fitzwilliam Street was built by the late 1790s but development to the east was more gradual with gaps remaining until the mid-nineteenth century.