Reg No
11803095
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Historical, Social
Original Use
House
In Use As
House
Date
1900 - 1910
Coordinates
293906, 238002
Date Recorded
07/02/2003
Date Updated
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Detached three-bay single-storey house with half-dormer attic, c.1905. Extended, c.1975, comprising single-bay single-storey flat-roofed return to rear to north-west. Refenestrated, c.1990. Gable-ended roof with slate. Red clay ridge tiles. Red brick chimney stack. Exposed timber eaves. Timber bargeboards. Cast-iron rainwater goods. Flat-roofed to return. Bitumen felt. Roughcast walls. Unpainted. Red brick (painted) dressings including quoins to corners. Square-headed window openings (shallow segmental-headed window openings to gables to side elevations to north-east and to south-west). Stone sills (concrete to return). Red brick block-and-start surrounds with hood mouldings over. Replacement uPVC casement windows, c.1990. Square-headed door opening in round-headed recessed panel having red brick (painted) block-and-start surround with hood moulding over. Replacement glazed uPVC door, c.1990. Overlight. Rendered pediment to round-headed panel over. Set back from road in own grounds. Rubble stone boundary wall to front with wrought iron gate.
This house is of social and historic interest, representing an early housing development in the locality sponsored by the local authority – the house forms a group with further identical houses to south of the town (Greenfield Cottages; 11803104 – 5/KD-05-03-104 – 5). Of picturesque appearance, the house is distinguished by the juxtaposition of roughcast with red brick dressings, and the decorative treatment to the openings. The house retains some original features and materials, notably the covering to the roof, while the replacement fenestration does not detract significantly from the original integrity of the design – however, the re-instatement of traditional-style timber fittings would benefit the composition. Set back slightly from the line of the road, the house is an attractive feature on the streetscape of Dillon’s Row.