Details |
Shops and house, now fully in residential use, built in the later 19th century with later alterations. It is a tall two-storey and attic, four-bay house with the ground floor converted from shops, and a lower two-storey, single bay at the east. The house has squared, coursed rubble with stugged ashlar dressings and projecting cills, snecked rubble to the sides and a first floor lintel band. The grey slate roof has broad coped gablehead stacks with a full-complement of polygonal cans and ashlar-coped skews with block skewputts. The principal south elevation has a central timber door and plate glass fanlight, flanked by blocked shop doorways and outer bipartite windows with recessed mullions (altered from shop windows). The first floor has regular fenestration with weathered lettering 'DT' and 'MP' between bays, and two slate-hung, polygonal-roofed, canted dormer windows above. The lower bay at the outer east has a single window to each floor, with that to the first floor breaking the eaves into a swept dormerhead.
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