Reg No
50010693
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Artistic
Original Use
House
In Use As
Apartment/flat (converted)
Date
1740 - 1760
Coordinates
315539, 235293
Date Recorded
16/09/2011
Date Updated
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Terraced two-bay three-storey house over raised basement, built c.1750, rebuilt, along with No. 42, by O'Callaghan and Webb c.1914. Now in multiple occupancy. Hipped artificial slate roof with terracotta ridge tiles set behind parapet wall with granite coping and replacement cast-iron hopper and downpipe breaking through parapet wall. Large brown brick chimneystack with clay pots, shared with No. 42, suggesting internal corner chimneybreasts. Red brick walls laid in English garden wall bond with flush pointing and cement rendered wall to basement. Gauged brick flat-arched window openings with concrete sills and replacement uPVC windows. Round-headed door opening with painted stone Gibbsian doorcase comprising replacement timber panelled door with stepped lintel cornice and original Y-tracery timber Gothick fanlight. Door opens onto concrete step, concrete platform and three concrete steps to street. Platform enclosed by replacement steel railing on moulded granite plinth wall, returning to enclose partly sunken basement area.
Along with the adjoining house, this house stands as one of the oldest surviving houses on Upper Dorset Street. Largely rebuilt in the early twentieth century with the loss of some original fabric, the simple early doorcase remains and retains a rare timber tracery fanlight (also seen on No. 75). The scale and proportions of this house add to the small collection of eighteenth-century structures on Dorset Street and help to contextualise the development and history of this early street.