Penrith is a town and civil parish in the Eden District, Cumbria, England. It contains 191 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. Of these, five are listed at Grade I, the highest of the three grades, 23 are at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. Most of the listed buildings are in the town of Penrith, with some in the surrounding countryside. The majority of these buildings are houses and associated structures, and shops. The other listed buildings include churches and structures in the churchyards, a ruined castle, bridges, public houses and hotels, a plague stone, a beacon tower, farmhouses and farm buildings, civic buildings, a school, a railway station, a clock tower, cemetery buildings, a bank, two war memorials and a war memorial gate, and a telephone kiosk.
The oldest part of the church is the lower stage of the tower, the upper part dating from the 15th century, and the rest of the church was rebuilt in 1721–22. It is built in red sandstone, and consists of a nave, a chancel, a shallow square apse, and a west tower. The west doorway has Doric columns, a triglyphfrieze, and a triangular pediment. Along the sides of the church are two tiers of round-headed windows with chamfered surrounds and triple keystones. Between the windows are pilasters, and on the south wall is a sundial.[2][3]
The oldest part is a pele tower, with a cottage in front dating from the 17th and 18th centuries. The pele tower is square with a pyramidal roof, and contains very small windows. The cottage is stuccoed with a slate roof, and has two storeys and four bays. The doorway has a chamfered surround, and the windows are sashes in stone architraves.[4][5]
The castle. now a ruin, is built in red sandstone. It was extended in the early 15th century, and further extended and converted into a residence in the 1470s by the future Richard III. The major remains consist of part of the south wall and the east tower, and tunnel vaults. In the walls are Perpendicular windows, and fireplace flues with pointed arches. The courtyard contains a circular wall, and to the northwest are the ruins of the gatehouse.[6][7]
The bridge carries the A6 road over the River Eamont, and was widened in 1875. It is in sandstone, and consists of a slightly humped bridge with three segmental arches. There are two cutwaters rising to form pedestrian refuges with solid parapets. The bridge is also a Scheduled Monument.[8][9][10]
A public house, originally Dockray Hall and the home of the future Richard III, with most of the present building dating from 1580. It is in stuccoed red sandstone, and has two storeys. On the front is a two-storey gabled porch containing a doorway above which is a carved and dated coat of arms. To the right is another doorway with an alternate block surround and another coat of arms above. Further to the right are a two-storey bay window and an arched coach entry. The windows vary; one is cross-mullioned, some are sashes, and some have hood moulds.[11][12]
The original house faces St Andrew's Place, and the restaurant front facing King's Street dates from a later period. The original house is in stone and has two gabled storeys. The windows have four lights with rounded heads and mullions, above the upper window is a string course, and in the gable is a small square window. To the right of the gable, and later, are three storeys containing a doorway with a shaped head, sash windows, and a round-headed stair window.[13][14]
This is possibly a cross base. It is in whinstone, and consists of a block measuring 2 feet 6 inches (0.76 m) by 2 feet 0 inches (0.61 m) by 1 foot 6 inches (0.46 m). The stone has chamfered angles and a square socket on the top.[15]
A row of three stuccoed stone houses with a slate roof and two storeys. Each house has a doorway with a segmental head and a fanlight. The windows are sashes in plain stone architraves, all but one of which are double.[16]
A row of shops, some dating from the 18th century. They are in stuccoed stone with quoins, and have two storeys. In the ground floor are shop fronts, and above are sash windows in plain stone architraves. Nos. 9 and 10 have a mouldedeavescornice, No. 11 has a doorway converted into a window that has a dated lintel, and No. 12 has double sash windows.[17]
A roughcast house with two storeys. The doorway is chamfered, and above it is an inscription with a name and date, and over that is a hood mould. The windows are sashes.[18]
The former public house originated as the New Hall, and was extended in the 18th century. It is in roughcast stone, and has two low storeys, a gabled wing to the right, and a former stable with loft to the left. On the front is a doorway with a moulded surround and a four-centred arched head, another doorway with a shaped lintel, a porch, and a sash window. At the rear is a blocked mullioned window with hood mould, and a re-used datestone. Inside is a plaster ceiling including coats of arms.[20][21]
The house was extended in the 18th century. It is in stuccoed stone with two storeys, a symmetrical three-bay front, and a rear wing. The central doorway has two three-quarter Doric columns with block entablatures, a semicircular fanlight, and an open pediment. The windows are sashes, and in the right return is a staircase window with mullions and transoms.[4][22]
The building originated as a public house, the oldest part being the left doorway, and the rest was rebuilt in the late 19th century. Above the left doorway is a shaped, moulded and inscribed lintel. The building is in stone, and has two storeys with attics and two bays. The windows in the ground and upper floors are double sashes, and in the attic they are single sashes in half-dormers.[23]
Originally Robinson's School, later used as a tourist information centre, it is in roughcast stone with a stone-slate roof, and has two low storeys. The doorway has a moulded surround and a lintel with an inscription and date. The mullioned windows have two and three lights and a hood mould, part of it continuing over the doorway.[24][25]
A pair of shops in stuccoed stone with a stone-flagged roof and two low storeys. In the centre is a yard entry with a moulded surround.In the ground floor are shop fronts, and in the upper storeys are sash windows.[26]
The meeting house was enlarged in 1730, and again in 1803, with the addition of a gabled wing, giving an L-shaped plan and providing a new entrance. It is in stuccoed stone, the doorway has a chamfered surround, and the windows are sashes.[27][28]
The hotel is in stuccoed stone, and has a slate roof, hipped on the south side, and two low storeys. In the ground floor are two 19th-century bay windows, and in the upper floor are three sash windows. On the right return is a glazed extension with three sash windows above.[29]
A row of three red sandstone houses with a stone-flagged roof and two storeys. The central doorway has a shaped, dated and initialled stone lintel, and the windows are sashes.[30]
The buildings are roughcast with slate roofs, two storeys, and sash windows in plain stone architraves. The oldest is No. 60, which has a doorway with a moulded surround and a dated lintel. There are two windows in the ground floor and three above. Nos. 61 and 62 have quoins, and together have two doors, and three windows in each floor.[31]
A pair of stuccoed stone house with two storeys. The Friarage has a doorway with a chamfered surround, above which is a datestone, and the windows have two lights with mullions. North Friarage has a panelled door and sash windows.[4][32]
The tower was built on the site of previous beacons. It is square, built in red sandstone, and has a pyramidal roof. On each side is a round-arched opening with a keystone and an iron grill. On the north and south sides are loops, and there is a round-headed doorway on the east side.[13][33]
These are stuccoed stone shops with a slate roof and two storeys. In the ground floor are two doorways with chamfered surrounds, small square shop windows, and a former segmental-headed coach entrance with an inserted modern door. In the upper floor are windows, some of which are sashes and others are mullioned.[34]
Originally a farmhouse and later a private house, it is in pebbledashed stone and has a slate roof. There are two low storeys and three bays. The mullions have been removed from the windows, which are in plain stone architraves.[35]
The shop, on a corner site, is in stuccoed stone with quoins and a slate roof, and it has two storeys. On the Victoria Road front are two bays, the left bay being gabled. In the ground floor are two shop windows, and in the upper floor are a square sash window and a lancet window. The ground floor of the Old London Road front contains a shop window and a doorway with a pointed arch, and in the upper floor are four sash windows in chamfered stone architraves.[37]
A pebbledashed stone house with a roof of slate at the front and stone flags at the rear, it has two storeys and a symmetrical three-bay front. Above the central doorway is a lintel with an inscribed, but illegible, panel. The windows are sashes, double in the ground floor and single above. All the openings have stone architraves.[38]
Originally a country house and later part of the Cumbria Police Headquarters, it was altered in the late 18th century, restored in 1859, and partly rebuilt in 1937. The building is in stone with slate roofs, and has two storeys and a symmetrical entrance front. The middle three bays are bowed and contain a central doorway, this is flanked by two bays, and outside these are three-bay wings with hipped roofs. At the rear the garden front has a central block of six bays, flanked by cantedbay windows. All the windows are sashes.[13][39]
The hotel was extended to the south in about 1807, and further to the south in 1924. It is in red sandstone. The northern part has three storeys and six bays. It contains a central carriage entrance with a cornice and a curved pediment. In the ground floor are shop fronts, above them are sash windows in architraves, and at the top is a cornice. The central part has four storeys and three bays. On the front is a Roman Doric porch with a cornice and a balustraded balcony. This is flanked by two-storey cantedbay windows, in the second floor are three-light windows, and in the top floor are two lunettes. The southern part has three storeys and five bays, and in the centre is a segmental arch leading to a market hall. The windows are sashes, the central window above the arch having three lights and a pediment.[41][42]
The building is in stuccoed stone, with projecting quoins, a mouldedcornice, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and basements. The round-headed doorway has three-quarter Doric columns, an entablature, and a pedimented cornice, and above the door is a radial fanlight. In the basement are modern windows, and in the floors above are sash windows in stone architraves. On the left side is a round-arched stair window, and on the right side is a doorway with pilasters and a cornice. In the front are wrought iron railings.[44]
A stuccoed stone house with a string course, 2+1⁄2 storeys and a high basement, and five bays. The doorway has a moulded surround and a segmental pediment with brackets, and the windows are sashes. At each side is a projecting two-storey wing joined to the main block by a Gothic link. The wings contain Venetian windows.[4][45]
A row of three houses, roughcast over sandstone, the sandstone exposed at the rear, with a stone-flagged roof, and three storeys. In the ground floor are three doorways, and the windows are sashes, some of them horizontally-sliding. At the rear is a staircase wing.[46]
A stuccoed stone house with two storeys and four bays. Four steps lead up to a doorway with a curved pediment. There are two modern windows to the right, a sash window and another doorway to the left, and four sash windows in the upper floor.[48]
A pair of stone shops with quoins and a slate roof. There are three storeys and each shop has two bays. In the ground floor are shop fronts, and above are sash windows in stone architraves.[51]
A stone building with three storeys and one bay. In the ground floor is a shop front, the middle floor contains a sash windows, and in the top floor is a blocked window.[52]
A stone shop with rusticatedquoins, a cornice, and three storeys. There are elaborate Victorian shop fronts on the west and south sides, with narrow colonnets and glazed scrolled friezes. On the north and south sides in the ground floor are round-headed windows with moulded surrounds and triple keystones, and the south side contains panels with raised lettering. In the upper floors are sash windows, some with pediments.[11][53]
A shop in red sandstone with quoins, three storeys and four bays. In the ground floor is a shop front and an arched yard entry to the right, and in the upper floors are sash windows in plain stone architraves.[54]
A stuccoed shop with three storeys and one bay. In the ground floor is a door with a plain architrave, and a shop window to the right, and in each of the upper floors is a sash window.[55]
A row of three stuccoed shops with a slate roof and two storeys. In the ground floor are two doors with fanlights, and a yard entry. The windows are sashes in plainarchitraves.[56]
A stuccoed stone house with two storeys and two bays. In the right of the ground floor is a yard entry with a chamfered surround. To the left is a doorway and a sash window, and in the upper floor are two sash windows; the doorway and windows have plain stone architraves.[57]
A row consisting of a shop and two houses in stuccoed stone, with two storeys. No. 23, the shop, has a yard entry with a chamfered surround, a door with a fanlight, and sash windows. To the right, Nos. 24 and 25 have long and short quoins, and doors with small fanlights. The doorway of No. 24 has pilasters and a cornice. The windows are sashes, those in the upper floor having cornices.[58]
A stuccoed stone house with quoins, three storeys and a symmetrical three-bay front. The central round-headed doorway has a chamfered surround and a semicircular fanlight. The windows are sashes in plain stone architraves. At the right is a yard doorway.[59]
A stuccoed stone shop with quoins, a slate roof, and two storeys. The doorway has a chamfered surround, to the left are two windows in mouldedarchitraves, to the right is a shop front and a yard door, and in the upper floor are five sash windows in moulded architraves.[60]
A pebbledashed stone shop with long and short quoins, three storeys and two bays. In the centre of the ground floor is a doorway with pilasters, a cornice and a fanlight, and an Edwardian shop front to the right. Above are sash windows in mouldedarchitraves, double in the middle floor, and single in the top floor. On the left side is a gable, and a wing containing sash windows and an archway with imposts.[61]
A row of stone shops with long and short quoins, a concave cornice, and three storeys. In the ground floor are shop fronts, and a coach entry with a four-centred arched head. In the middle floor are seven sash windows, and in the top floor are two sash windows and five casement windows.[62]
A group of roughcast stone shops. No. 26 is on a corner with quoins. It has four storeys, and the other shops have three storeys. In the ground floor are shop fronts and shop windows, and in the upper floors are sash windows.[63]
Two stone shops, each with quoins and three storeys, but of different heights. No. 43 is higher and has a door with a fanlight, a sash window to the left, and a Victorian shop front to the right. In both upper floors there are two sash windows. No. 44, to the right, has an Edwardian shop front in the ground floor, and a double sash window with a mullion in each of the upper floors.[64]
A row of stone shop and a public house with three storeys. In the ground floor are modern shop fronts. Most of the windows in the upper floors are sashes, with ten in the top floor and nine in the middle floor, all in plain stone architraves.[65]
A pair of stuccoed shop with quoins and three low storeys. In the centre is a doorway, and this is flanked by shop fronts. In the middle floor are one double and two single sash windows. and in the top floor are two small casement windows; all the windows have stone architraves.[67]
A pair of shops in stuccoed stone with quoins and two low storeys. In the ground floor is a central yard entry, flanked by shop fronts with pilasters and a continuous fascia and cornice. In the upper floor are double sash windows in plain architraves.[68]
These are stuccoed shops with three storeys. No. 19 retains some medieval features, it is gabled, and has a doorway and a window with chamfered surrounds in the ground floor, an oriel window in the middle floor, and a two-light mullioned window in the top floor. Nos. 20 and 21 are combined into one shop, with four bays, an Edwardian shop front, and sash windows in stone architraves above.[69]
A row of stone shops with three storeys. In the ground floor are late Victorian shop fronts with slender colonnets and pilasters with ornamental capitals. In each upper floor are six sash windows.[70]
A stuccoed shop with a stone-flagged roof on a corner site. Part of the shop has two low storeys, an early 20th-century shop front, and two sash windows above. The part on the corner is canted, it has three storeys, a hipped roof, a modern shop front, and a sash window in each floor on both faces.[71]
A row of three stone shops with three storeys and of varying heights, all with modern shop fronts. No. 3 has three sash windows in each upper floor. Between No. 3 and No. 4 is a narrow yard entry. No. 4 projects forward and has one sash window in each floor on the front and on the right side. No. 5 has three sash windows in the middle floor and two in the top floor.[72]
Originally a public house and cottages, later converted into a private house and a restaurant, it is stuccoed. The left part has three storeys, and contains a round-headed doorway with a fanlight, a doorway with a flat head, and sash windows. The wing to the right has two low storeys.[73]
A terrace of stone houses of differing size, some pebbledashed, and some stuccoed. Most have two storeys, but No. 22 has three storeys. No. 18 is a public house, The Druids Arms. Most of the buildings have panelled doors with fanlights and sash windows. No. 23 has a round-arched doorway with imposts and a keystone and a segmental-headed carriage entrance, and No. 31 has a window and door inserted into a former coach entrance.[75]
A roughcast stone house with a roof partly of slate and partly stone-flagged, with two storeys. There are two doorways, and two sash windows in each floor.[76]
A pair of stuccoed stone shops with a roof of slate at the front and stone flags at the rear. There are two storeys, in the ground floor are two small shop fronts, and in the upper floor are three windows of differing types and sizes.[77]
A pair of pebbledashed stone houses with three storeys. In the ground floor are two doors and shop fronts, and a segmental arched carriage entrance to the right. There are five sash windows in each of the upper floors, and a round-headed staircase window.[78]
The public house is in roughcast stone with a slate roof. There are two low storeys, and the doorway has a chamfered stone surround. There is one casement window, one double sash window with a stone mullion, and the others are single sashes. In the south wall is a Victorian letter box.[80]
The building is in roughcast stone with a slate roof, three storeys, and a central block of three bays. Steps lead up to a central round-headed doorway in the middle floor with imposts, a keystone, and a fanlight. The windows are sashes. To the right is a projecting three-storey gabled wing, and to the left is a two-storey wing with a hipped roof.[81]
Originally a farmhouse with a barn adjoining to the left. It is in roughcast stone and has two storeys and sash windows. In the barn is a segmental arch with a keystone.[a][84]
A stone building with three storeys. It has a panelled door, and the windows are sashes, with two in the ground floor, two in the middle floor, and one in the top floor.[85]
The malt house is in the grounds of Shepherd's Hill. It is a rectangular stone building, and has a stone-flagged roof with a square louvred ventilator. The exterior is plain, but inside are a well, a large stone trough, a furnace, a pierced floor, and brick arched vaulting.[86]
Originally one house, later divided, it is in stuccoed stone, with two storeys and eight bays. The main doorway has pilasters, a frieze and a pediment, and in the ground floor there are three more doorways and a yard entrance. The windows are sashes, and in the left return wall is a 17th-century mullioned window with a hood mould.[87]
Originally a farmhouse and attached barn, later a private house, it is in roughcast stone with a stone-flagged roof and has two storeys. The doorway and sash windows have stone architraves. To the left is an arched stable door and a barn entrance that has a segmental arch with voussoirs, imposts and a keystone.[90]
The hotel is stuccoed with stone quoins, and has two storeys. The doorway has attached Doric columns and a cornice. There are three sash windows in the ground floor and four in the upper floor. At the rear are three arched windows, and on the right side is a two-storey cantedbay window.[91]
The public house, formerly the Dog and Duck Inn, was extended in the 18th century. It is in pebbledashed stone, and has long and short quoins. There are two storeys and four bays. The windows on the front are sashes, and on the right side are two small mullioned windows with moulded surrounds.[94]
The shop front was altered in the 20th century. It is stuccoed with long and short quoins, a cornice, and three storeys. In the ground floor are two convex shop windows flanking the doorway, and a fascia above. The middle floor contains wide modern windows, in the top floor are four sash windows, and in the roof is a gableddormer.[95]
Originally an inn with attached farm buildings, later a private house, it is in stuccoed stone with a slate roof and has two storeys. There is a doorway converted into a window that has an inscribed lintel, above which is an iron plaque. The windows are sashes, two of which have chamferedmullions. To the right is an extension with a sash window in the ground floor and two horizontally-sliding sash windows in the upper floor. To the rear and at right angles are a red sandstone stable and barn with ventilation slits.[96]
The public house is in stuccoed stone, and has two low storeys and a canted corner. In the ground floor is a doorway and a double sash window, and elsewhere are single sash windows.[97]
A stuccoed stone shop with quoins, string courses, a mouldedcornice, a small central segmental pediment, and three storeys. In the ground floor is a shop front, and a double doorway with moulded architraves, a pulvinated frieze, a moulded cornice, a segmental pediment, and an inscribed plaque. In each of the upper floors the central window has two round-headed lights flanked by lower flat-headed lights, and in the middle floor there are also windows with ogee heads.[98]
Originally a farmhouse and cottages, No. 30 is stuccoed, with two storeys, a central doorway and two sash windows in each floor, all in plain stone architraves. Nos. 31 and 32 have three storeys, two doorways with chamfered surrounds, and two sash windows in each floor.[99]
A shop in red sandstone with four storeys and one bay. In the ground floor is a shop front with a fascia dating from the early 20th century, and in each of the upper floors is a sash window.[101]
Two pairs of stuccoed cottages with roofs partly of slate and partly of stone flags. Nos. 16 and 17 are higher than Nos. 14 and 15. In each pair the doors are central, and most windows are sashes. All the openings have chamfered stone surrounds.[102]
A house sited on a junction, with a curved end facing the junction, it is stuccoed and has two storeys. In the curved end are double sash windows in each floor, with an iron grill in front of the lower window. On the Queen Street front is a doorway and two sash windows, and on the Albert Street front is a staircase window and a sash window.[103]
The house, which is in Gothic style, is stuccoed with a slate roof and two low storeys. In the centre is a doorway and a door with pointed arches. To the left in both storeys is a window with a pointed arch in a stone chamferedarchitrave. To the right in each floor is two-light window with chamfered mouldings, mullions, and Tudor arched heads.[104]
The hotel is in red sandstone and has three storeys. In the ground floor of the King Street front is a doorway and two sash windows, in the middle floor are two round-arched windows, and the top floor contains two ogee-headed windows. The left hand wing of the Crown Square front is gabled with bargeboards. In the middle floor is a Venetian window and in the top floor is an ogee-headed window. To the right is a lower three-storey wing with sash windows.[108]
A red sandstone house with long and short quoins, bands, and three storeys. It has a symmetrical front of five bays, flanked by single storey wings containing doorways, each of which has Doric attached columns and a cornice. The windows are sashes in stone architraves.[24][109]
A stuccoed stone house with two low storeys. On the front are two doorways with chamfered surrounds, one with a dated and initialled lintel, and sash windows in stone architraves. At the rear are three gables, and a round-headed stair window.[111]
A stuccoed shop with long and short quoins, three storeys and two bays. In the ground floor is a shop front with a central doorway, and a yard entry to the right. In each upper floor are two sash windows in chamfered stone architraves.[112]
A stone house with long and short quoins, two storeys and a symmetrical front of three bays. In the centre is a doorway with a mouldedarchitrave, and the windows are sashes.[113]
A pair of stone houses. Eamont Lodge has three storeys, and on the west end is a cantedbay window with Tuscan columns, and in each floor above are sash windows. On the front away from the road is a long round-headed sash window. No. 2, to the east, has two storeys and sash windows.[115]
On the west side of the courtyard is a long row of stone farm buildings with a roof partly in stone. At right angles to it on the north side is a barn in red sandstone containing a cart entrance with a moulded surround and a depressed arch.[117]
A stone building with three storeys and a basement. There are two central doorways, sash windows, a stair window, and iron railings in front of the area.[118]
A stone house in Neoclassical style, with a stuccoed front, a red sandstone rear wing, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and a symmetrical front of three bays. The central round-headed doorway has an ornamental fanlight, and the windows are sashes. In the ground floor the windows are tripartite and slightly recessed under segmental arches, and in the upper floor they are single. On the roof is a central chimney stock with eight flues in a line.[13][119]
The church is stuccoed with quoins, bands, and a parapet. There are two storeys, and three bays on the entrance front and the sides. The doorway is flanked by unflutedRoman Doric three-quarter columns carrying a block entablature and a pediment, and above the door is a semicircular fanlight. The windows on the front and sides in both storeys are round-headed.[27][120]
A stuccoed stone house with quoins, a cornice, a parapet, and a slate roof. There are two storeys with an attic, and a symmetrical front of three bays. In the centre is a portico with two Tuscan columns, a frieze and a cornice, and above the door is a semicircular fanlight. The windows are sashes in plain stone architraves. On the left side is a round-headed attic window, and at the rear is a round-headed staircase window.[4][122]
A pair of roughcast houses with a stone-flagged roof and two storeys. In the ground floor is a garage entrance to the left, two modern doors, and five windows. In the upper floor are six windows, one being a round-headed staircase window. All the other windows are sashes.[127]
Two shops on a corner site in stone with a curved corner, a hipped roof, and three storeys. In the ground floor are shop fronts and the door to a flat, and in the upper floors are sash windows.[128]
A pair of stuccoed shops with three storeys. In the centre of the ground floor is a yard entry. This is flanked by shop fronts, and there are three windows in each of the upper floors.[129]
A terrace of four pebbledashed houses with a roof of stone and slate, and two low storeys. No. 20 has a four-centred arched doorway, and the other houses have plain doorways. Nos. 19 and 20 have mullioned windows; Nos. 21 and 22 have sash windows.[130]
A pair of stuccoed houses with two storeys. The front facing the rear was originally the rear, and it contains two modern doors and two round-headed staircase windows. The main doorways have a common doorcase with pilasters and a cornice, and the windows are sashes, all in red sandstonearchitraves.[131]
The building is in sandstone with three storeys. In the ground floor is a cart entrance that has a segmental arch with imposts, and in the centre of the top floor is a taking-in door. The windows are small-paned, with two on the ground floor, three in the middle floor, and two on the top floor.[24][132]
A house in late Georgian Gothic style, with two storeys, once the residence of Anthony Trollope. On the entrance front is a shallow porch with a pointed arch, a Gothic doorway, and mullioned and transomed windows. The garden front has three two-storey bay windows, again containing mullioned and transomed windows.[133]
Originally a hunting lodge, later divided into two dwellings, it has a stuccoed front and two storeys. The centre is gabled and has a doorway with a pointed arch. Flanking this are two two-light windows with round-headed lights and hood moulds in each floor, and outside this on each side is a three-storey tower with similar three-light windows. At the rear are a coach house, a barn, a stable, and a loft approached by external steps; these are in two ranges, forming three sides of a courtyard, which is cobbled.[134]
Originally one house, later divided into two dwellings, it is roughcast on a rusticatedplinth, and has red sandstonequoins and architraves. There are two storeys. The doorway has a semicircular head and a fanlight, and at the rear is a round-headed stair window.[137]
The house is in stuccoed stone with quoins, and it has two storeys and three bays. In the centre is a red sandstone porch with two Doric columns and an entablature. The windows are sashes in plain stone surrounds.[139]
A public house on a corner site and an adjoining shop, they are stuccoed, with quoins and three storeys. In the ground floor the public house has a doorway with a chamfered stone architrave and a fanlight, and the shop has a shop front and a yard entry. In the upper floor are sash windows.[140]
Originally a single house, later divided into two dwellings, it is rendered with quoins, a slate roof, and two storeys. There are two doorways in the centre of the front, the windows are sashes, and at the rear are two round-headed stair windows. All the openings have plain stone surrounds.[141]
A stuccoed stone house on a plinth, with quoins, a band, and a slate roof. There are two storeys and a symmetrical front of three bays. Four steps lead up to the central round-headed doorway that has fluted attached half-columns and a semicircular fanlight. The windows are sashes in plain architraves.[143]
The shop is in pebbledashed stone, and has three storeys. In the ground floor is a modern shop front, and in each of the upper floors are two sash windows in stone architraves.[144]
The porch was added in 1867. The building is in pebbledashed stone and has two storeys. To the left are farm buildings that have been incorporated in the inn. The windows are sashes in chamfered stone architraves.[145]
The public house is in pebbledashed stone, and has three storeys and four bays. The entrance has a segmental arch, and the windows are sashes in plain stone architraves. In the ground floor is an inserted three-light window.[149]
Originally one building, later divided into shops, it is in ashlar with bands, a cornice, and a parapet. There are four storeys and four bays. In the centre of the ground floor is a round-headed doorway with a semicircular fanlight, and this is flanked by shop fronts. In the left bay of the first floor is an oriel window, and the other windows are sashes.[152]
The farmhouse and farm buildings are in stone. The farmhouse has three storeys, a central doorway, and two windows in each floor in stone architraves, three of which are casements. At the rear is a round-arched stair window. Attached to the east are a barn and byre with a round-arched window.[153]
The house is in roughcast stone with a slate roof, and has two storeys. The doorway has a rectangular fanlight, the windows are sashes, and all have stone architraves. In the gable end facing the road is a round-headed staircase window. To the rear, and forming an L-shaped plan, is a red sandstone coach house with a depressed rusticated arch.[154]
The school is in red sandstone with a slate roof and it has a single storey. On the front facing the road are two single sash windows and one double sash. There is a long wing at the rear containing the entrance.[156]
The station was built for the Lancaster and Carlisle Railway and designed by Sir William Tite in Tudor Gothic style. It is built in stone, it has a single storey, and consists of a central block flanked by unequal gabled wings. The central block contains an entrance with a Tudor arched head and mullioned windows. In the wings the windows are mullioned and transomed. An island platform was added in 1860.[160][161]
A row of four stone houses with three storeys, and two bays each. The doorways have unflutedRoman Doric attached columns, hollow-chamfered round-headed arches, and semicircular fanlights. The windows are sashes.[163]
A house to which a Victorian plaster front has been added, and which has channelled joints to resemble masonry. It has two storeys and a symmetrical three-bay front. There are full height ornate Corinthianpilasters, a dentilledcornice, and moulded surrounds to the central doorway and the sash windows.[166]
A row of three houses in red sandstone, with mouldedeaves on brackets. There are two storeys and each house has two bays. The doorways are round-headed with hollow-chamfered surrounds, and above the doors are traceriedfanlights. The windows are sashes, one in each ground floor, and two in the upper floors.[167]
A pair of buildings in red sandstone with quoins, bands, and a pierced parapet. There are three storeys and six bays. The ground floor is rusticated, and contains sash windows with segmental heads, and doorways in the outer bays. The other windows are also sashes, in the middle floor they have round heads and small balconies, and in the top floor they have segmental heads, and all have hood moulds.[170]
A red sandstone shop with eavesmodillions, a slate roof, and three storeys. In the ground and middle floor are cast iron columns. The ground floor contains a shop front with flat heads, and in the middle floor are arched windows. In both floors are continuous hood moulds, and in top floor are two sash windows with segmental heads.[171]
A row of shops and a public house, they are in stuccoed stone, and have three storeys. In the ground floor of the shops are inserted shop fronts, and the public house has a panelled door. In the upper storeys are sash windows, some of which are double.[172]
A row of three roughcast stone houses of differing sizes with two storeys. No. 2 has a sash window and a modern window in the ground floor, and three sash windows in the upper floor; No. 3 has a central doorway, two windows in the ground floor and five in the upper floor, all with cornices; and No. 4 has one window in each floor.[174]
A pair of red sandstone buildings with three storeys, panelled doors, and sash windows. No. 12 also has eaves on brackets, windows with curved heads, and two shop windows.[175]
A terrace of eight houses in red sandstone with quoins, blocked eaves, a slate roof, and two storeys. The doorways have round arches, and above each door is a semicircular fanlight with delicate iron tracery. The windows are sashes in plain stone architraves. Between Nos. 5 and 6 is a round-arched yard entry.[176]
The public house, on a corner site, is in red sandstone, partly stuccoed, with three storeys, and is in Gothic style. On the Corn Market front is a two-storey oriel window with pointed arched lights and stone mullions. These are flanked by Gothic-style windows, those in the top floor having pointed heads. On the Great Dockray front is a doorway and sash windows.[178]
A sandstone house with quoins and a slate roof. It is in Gothic style, and has two storeys and three bays. The porch is gabled with a pointed arch, and above the door is a fanlight, also with a pointed arch. The windows have two lights, and in the ground floor they have hood moulds. In the upper floor are three gabled half-dormers. The gables of the porch and the half-dormers have ornamented bargeboards.[179]
The farm buildings and cattle shed form a square courtyard plan. They are in stone with slate roofs, and include a sequence of blocked segmental-arched sheds.[181]
A cottage in Victorian Gothic style, roughcast, with long and short quoins, and a hippedslate roof. It is symmetrical with a single storey. The central round-headed doorway has a Tuscan doorcase with attached columns and an open pediment. Above the door is a radial fanlight. On each side of the doorway are three-light windows with Tudor arches, mullions, and square heads. Flanking the house are lower wings with similar two-light windows.[183]
A red sandstone building with two storeys. The central doorway has a segmental head, a fanlight, and a curved cornice on brackets. The windows are sashes, some single and some double.[184]
A red sandstone shop on a corner site, with a curved corner, full-height pilasters, and mouldedstring courses, the lower one on brackets. There are three storeys, two bays on de Whelpdale's Lane, and one on Burrowgate. On the corner is a curved doorway, and there is another doorway on de Whelpdale's Lane. In the ground floor on both faces is a shop window with two round arches, slender colonnets, and decorated spandrels, and in the upper floors are sash windows.[b][185]
A red sandstone house with quoins and a cornice. There are two storeys, three bays, and a lower two-storey two-bay wing to the right. The central doorway has a moulded surround, a rectangular fanlight, a cornice, and a pediment on brackets. The windows are sashes.[186]
These were originally a public house and attached stable, and are on a corner site. The house is stuccoed with quoins, blocked eaves and a slate roof. There are two storeys and a basement, and each front has three bays. On the Graham Street front steps with railings lead up to a central doorway with pilasters, a small fanlight and a cornice. The Beacon Road front is gabled and has another door and a datestone. The stable was converted into a cottage in about 1890. It has two storeys and three bays, and above the ground floor door and windows is a continuous hood mould. All the windows are sashes in plain architraves.[187]
A house with an entrance front in grey ashlar and the front facing the road in red sandstone. It is on a plinth and has grey ashlar quoins, an eavescornice, and a hipped roof. There are two storeys, and the entrance front has three bays. The doorway has a moulded surround, and the windows are sashes in moulded architraves, those in the ground floor also with cornices. Attached to the rear are a stable and coach house in red sandstone.[188]
The former grammar school, later used as a library, is in red sandstone with a slate roof, and has a single storey. Along the sides are five three-light windows with mullions and transoms and pointed arched heads. The doorway has a segmental arch. On the roof is a square timber belfry set diagonally with Gothic openings and a broach spirelet.[189]
The clock tower stands in the centre of Market Square. It is in grey ashlar stone, and is square. At the base are stepped corner buttresses, and a trefoil arch on each face. From the base is a shaft with corner pilasters, rising to form a pointed arch containing a clock face. Above this is a gable and a pyramidal roof with a finial.[160][190]
Originally a Congregational church, it was designed by George Webster in Decorated style. The church is built in red sandstone with slate roofs. Facing the street is a large gabled front containing double doors and a large windows with Geometrictracery, To the right is a two-stage tower with a bell stage and a short broach spire, and to the right of this is a two-storey wing with a three-light window in each floor.[27][192]
The gateway is symmetrical and in Gothic style. In the centre is a tower containing an archway, with buttresses, a bell stage, and a spire with corner spirelets. The tower is flanked by chapels, each having a gable with a finial, and containing a three-light window with plate tracery. Outside each chapel is a gabled porch.[193][194]
The lodge is built in red sandstone and is in late Victorian Gothic style. It has two storeys with gables and a T-shaped plan. In the angle facing the entrance is a gabled porch that has a doorway with a pointed arch. The windows are mullioned, some with trefoil heads, and others with pointed arches.[27][195]
The church is in Italianate style, and is built in red sandstone with rusticatedquoinpilasters, bands, and a slate roof. There are two storeys, the front has three bays, and there are seven bays along the sides. The entrance front has steps leading up to double doors with a Corinthian surround, above is a triple-arched windows, and at the top is a pediment containing an oculus. Along the sides are two tiers of windows, the upper ones with semicircular heads, and the lower ones with square heads.[27][196]
A shop in red sandstone with blocked eaves, a slate roof, and an Edwardian shop front. There are three storeys and four bays. In the top floor are four windows over a band, and flanking the lower two floors are pilasters. The middle floor is glazed, and has a central pilaster, a cornice, two large three-light windows with iron mullions, capitals, bases, and curved heads. In the ground floor are two doors, and shop windows with iron mullions.[197]
The building is in red sandstone, with bands, drip moulds, and a cornice. There are three storeys and two bays. In the ground floor is a porch with plain columns, and to the right is a three-light arched window. The middle floor contains a paired window to the left and an oriel window to the right, and in the top floor are two paired sash windows. In the front are cast iron railings.[198]
A roughcast house in Gothic style, with quoins, a slate roof, two storeys and four bays. The first and second bays are gabled with ornamental bargeboards, and in the second bay is a porch with a pointed arch. In the third bay is a stair window with a pointed arch, and the other windows are sashes. In the garden front are two single-storey bay windows.[199]
The town hall was adapted from two Classical houses of 1791. It is built in red sandstone from Lazonby and buff sandstone from Stanton Moor, and the roof is in Lakelandslate. The building is in Italian Renaissance style, it has a rectangular plan with a rear wing, and there are two storeys, a partial attic and a partial basement, and an asymmetrical front of six bays. The entrance is in the fourth bay, and has a Corinthian porch with a balustrade. Other features include a bay window in the second bay, mullioned and transomed windows, a balustraded parapet, and on the roof is a timber cupola with a lead roof.[160][200]
The memorial stands in Castle Park, and is in granite. It consists of a three-stepped base, a tapered plinth with draped cartouches and a cornice, and a scrolled step on which is a bronze female figure holding a laurel wreath. On the plinth is an inscription and the names of those lost in the Boer War.[6][201]
The bank, on a corner site, is in Tudor style, and is built in red sandstone. There are three storeys and a cantedbay on the corner. The entrance is in the corner bay and has a Tudor arched doorway, above which are oriels in both storeys with round-headed windows. Elsewhere are embattled oriels, mullioned and transomed windows, battlemented turrets, and four copper-covered spirelets.[160][202]
The war memorial is in the churchyard, it is in sandstone and consists of a tall Celtic cross on a small stepped pedestal. There is ornate carving on both faces of the cross head, and inscriptions around the base of the shaft.[27][203]
The war memorial is in the form of a sandstonegabled archway at the entrance to the park. The arch is chamfered and inscribed, above it is a hood mould and a dated plaque, and it is flanked by stepped and copedbuttresses. On each side of the archway are cantedbays forming pavilions containing mullioned windows. Inside the arch are bronze plaques with inscriptions and the names of those lost in the two World Wars.[204]
KembangarumDesaNegara IndonesiaProvinsiJawa TengahKabupatenDemakKecamatanMranggenKode pos59567Kode Kemendagri33.21.01.2010 Luas... km²Jumlah penduduk... jiwaKepadatan... jiwa/km² Desa Kembangarum selain menjalankan roda pemerintahan di wilayah pedesaan juga berperan aktif dalam mengembangkan sumber daya manusianya, salah satu motor penggerak di desa Kembangarum yaitu giatnya para ibu-ibu di desa Kembangarum yang tergabung dalam kelompok PKK Desa maupun PKK di tingkat RT dan RW. Sebagai...
Artikel ini sebatang kara, artinya tidak ada artikel lain yang memiliki pranala balik ke halaman ini.Bantulah menambah pranala ke artikel ini dari artikel yang berhubungan atau coba peralatan pencari pranala.Tag ini diberikan pada Februari 2023. Artikel atau sebagian dari artikel ini mungkin diterjemahkan dari Grammy Award for Best Southern, Country or Bluegrass Gospel Album di en.wikipedia.org. Isinya masih belum akurat, karena bagian yang diterjemahkan masih perlu diperhalus dan disempurnak...
Alan BlinderStudio Brooks / Glogau, 2014Lahir14 Oktober 1945 (umur 78)Brooklyn, New YorkKebangsaanAmericanAlmamaterPrinceton University London School of EconomicsMassachusetts Institute of Technology (Ph.D.)PendahuluDavid W. Mullins, Jr.PenggantiAlice M. Rivlin Alan Stuart Blinder (lahir 14 Oktober 1945) adalah ekonom asal Amerika Serikat. Kehidupan pribadi Ia menikah dan memiliki dua orang putra. Beberapa karya (2009), How Many U.S. Jobs Might Be Offshorable, World Economics, April–J...
يفتقر محتوى هذه المقالة إلى الاستشهاد بمصادر. فضلاً، ساهم في تطوير هذه المقالة من خلال إضافة مصادر موثوق بها. أي معلومات غير موثقة يمكن التشكيك بها وإزالتها. (نوفمبر 2019) كأس آيسلندا 2011 تفاصيل الموسم كأس آيسلندا النسخة 52 البلد آيسلندا المنظم اتحاد آيسلندا لكرة القد...
Landon Donovan Informasi pribadiNama lengkap Landon Timothy DonovanTanggal lahir 4 Maret 1982 (umur 42)Tempat lahir Ontario, CA, ASTinggi 173 cm (5 ft 8 in)[1]Posisi bermain Penyerang/GelandangInformasi klubKlub saat ini Los Angeles GalaxyNomor 10Karier junior1999 IMG Soccer AcademyKarier senior*Tahun Tim Tampil (Gol)1999–2001 Bayer Leverkusen II 28 (9)1999–2005 Bayer Leverkusen 7 (0)2001–2004 → San Jose Earthquakes (pinjaman) 87 (32)2005– Los Angeles Ga...
Brazilian sport played with a footballFutevolei Ipanema during the Volkswagen 2014 Brazil Tour Footvolley (Portuguese: Futevôlei [futʃiˈvolej] in Brazil, Futevólei [ˌfutɨˈvɔlɐj] in Portugal) (first known as pevoley) is a sport that combines aspects of beach volleyball and association football.[1] Similar to Kick Volleyball and Futnet. Footvolley was created by Octavio de Moraes in 1965 in Brazil.[2] Footvolley combines field rules that are based on tho...
Trade association for the UK and Ireland structural steel industry BCSA LtdNicknameBritish Constructional Steelwork Association[1]FormationApril 1, 1936; 88 years ago (1936-04-01)[2]TypeTrade associationLegal statusPrivate company limited by guarantee[3]PurposeInform, liaise and promote the structural steel industry[4]HeadquartersWhitehall Court, London[1]Coordinates51°30′19″N 0°07′28″W / 51.5054°N 0.12436°W...
Weather warning indicating an observed severe thunderstorm Not to be confused with Severe thunderstorm watch. This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations. Please help summarize the quotations. Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or excerpts to Wikisource. (December 2019) Severe thunderstorm with a clear slot near main updraft core. Typically a tornado, if present, will form in this area. This is called a Rear Flank Downdraft and can be a sign of tornado genesi...
For other places with the same name, see Kędzierzyn. Village in Masovian Voivodeship, PolandKędzierzynVillageKędzierzynCoordinates: 52°41′52″N 19°43′52″E / 52.69778°N 19.73111°E / 52.69778; 19.73111Country PolandVoivodeshipMasovianCountyPłockGminaBielsk Kędzierzyn [kɛnˈd͡ʑɛʐɨn] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Bielsk, within Płock County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.[1] References ^ Central Stat...
The public domain in French public law. National palaces, like Chambord, are part of the artificial public domain. The Seine is part of the public river domain A road is part of the public road domain A town hall is part of the public domain... ... and a school assigned to the public education service. ... or a prison, assigned to the public prison service In French public law, the public domain is all property (immovable or movable) belonging to the State, local authorities, public establish...
Little Church Around the CornerCuplikan filmSutradaraWilliam A. SeiterSkenarioOlga PrintzlauCeritaCharles E. BlaneyBerdasarkanLittle Church Around the Corneroleh Marion RussellPemeranClaire WindsorKenneth HarlanHobart BosworthPauline StarkeWalter LongCyril ChadwickSinematograferEdwin B. DuParHomer ScottPenyuntingC.R. WallacePerusahaanproduksiWarner Bros.DistributorWarner Bros.Tanggal rilis Maret 1923 (1923-03) Durasi70 menitNegaraAmerika SerikatBahasaBisu (intertitel Inggris)Anggaran$141...
Кавун безнасінний. Плід груші без насіння. Партенокарпія (від давньогрец. parthenos — діва і karpos — плід; дослівно «незайманий плід») — окремий випадок партеногенезу, запліднення без запилення в рослин, зазвичай з утворенням плодів без насіння. Партенокарпія є досить ...
Species of mammal Arctic hare Arctic hare in Nunavut, Canada Conservation status Least Concern (IUCN 3.1)[1] Scientific classification Domain: Eukaryota Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammalia Order: Lagomorpha Family: Leporidae Genus: Lepus Species: L. arcticus Binomial name Lepus arcticusRoss, 1819 Subspecies 4, see text Arctic hare range The Arctic hare[2] (Lepus arcticus) is a species of hare highly adapted to living in the Arctic tundra and other icy...
Cet article est une ébauche concernant les Jeux olympiques. Vous pouvez partager vos connaissances en l’améliorant (comment ?) selon les recommandations des projets correspondants. Grande-Bretagne aux Jeux olympiques d'été de 1948 Code CIO GBR Comité BOA Lieu Londres Participation 10e Athlètes 404 (335 homme et 68 femme) dans 21 sports Porte-drapeau John Emrys Lloyd MédaillesRang : 12e Or3 Arg.14 Bron.6 Total23 Historique Jeux olympiques d'été 1896 1900 1904 1908 1912 19...
Palazzo BortolanLocalizzazioneStato Italia LocalitàTreviso Informazioni generaliCondizioniin uso Usodestinazione culturale RealizzazioneProprietarioFondazione Cassamarca Committentefamiglia Bortolan Modifica dati su Wikidata · Manuale Palazzo Bortolan, anche noto come palazzo dell'Umanesimo Latino, è un palazzo situato nel centro storico di Treviso, in riviera Garibaldi, sede di molteplici attività culturali[1]. Indice 1 Storia 2 Descrizione 2.1 Esterno 2.2 Interno 3 Not...
Tennis tournament2010 Australian OpenDate18–31 January 2010Edition98thCategoryGrand Slam (ITF)SurfaceHardcourt (Plexicushion)LocationMelbourne, AustraliaVenueMelbourne ParkChampionsMen's singles Roger FedererWomen's singles Serena WilliamsMen's doubles Bob Bryan / Mike BryanWomen's doubles Serena Williams / Venus WilliamsMixed doubles Cara Black / Leander PaesWheelchair men's singles Shingo KuniedaWheelchair women's singles Korie HomanWheelchair quad singles Peter NorfolkWheelchair men's d...
Divisions du Bangladesh (depuis septembre 2015) Le Bangladesh est composé de huit divisions (bibhags, বিভাগ) qui portent chacune le nom de leur capitale. Chaque division est divisée en districts (zila ou jela, জেলা) puis en upazilas. Division Capitale District Upazila Municipalité Ward Mahallah Union Mauza Village Population Superficie Barisal Barisal 6 39 22 219 419 333 3 183 4 273 8 325 666 13 644,85 Chittagong Chittagong 11 97 38 404 1 174...