Reg No
13831017
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Social
Original Use
Worker's house
In Use As
House
Date
1870 - 1875
Coordinates
322383, 310825
Date Recorded
08/08/2005
Date Updated
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Terraced two-bay two-storey former railway worker's house, built 1872, now in private domestic use. Pitched slate roof, clay ridge tiles, red brick corbelled chimneystack, cast-iron gutters on painted timber fascia to overhanging eaves. Squared coursed rubble limestone walling; unpainted smooth rendered walling to east. Square-headed window openings, block-and-start bull-nosed yellow brick jambs, flat-arched bull-nosed brick lintels, granite sills, painted timber six-over-six sliding sash windows with horns. Square-headed door opening, block-and-start bull-nosed yellow brick jambs, flat-arched bull-nosed brick lintel, limestone threshold, painted timber panelled door with timber spoked half-round glazed top panel, frosted-glazed overlight. Fronts directly onto street, garden to east with communal laneway giving access to gardens forming eastern boundary.
This modest terraced house is a fine example of late-nineteenth-century worker's housing. Built for the workers of the London and North Western Railway, which was completed in 1873, the terrace is an integral part of Greenore. Their simple forms are enhanced by the attractive yellow brick window dressings, a feature of Euston Street, and they stand as a reminder of the development of Greenore as an important transit point in the late-nineteenth century.