Latitude: 51.4733 / 51°28'24"N
Longitude: -2.6269 / 2°37'36"W
OS Eastings: 356552
OS Northings: 175117
OS Grid: ST565751
Mapcode National: GBR C0B.XP
Mapcode Global: VH88M.F73C
Plus Code: 9C3VF9FF+86
Entry Name: Numbers 28 and 30 and Attached Piers and Front Garden Walls
Listing Date: 30 December 1994
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1280329
English Heritage Legacy ID: 379510
ID on this website: 101280329
Location: Sneyd Park, Bristol, BS9
County: City of Bristol
Electoral Ward/Division: Stoke Bishop
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Bristol
Traditional County: Gloucestershire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Bristol
Church of England Parish: Stoke Bishop
Church of England Diocese: Bristol
Tagged with: Building
BRISTOL
ST5675 DOWNLEAZE, Sneyd Park
901-1/31/1790 (South East side)
Nos.28 AND 30
and attached piers and front garden
walls
GV II
Pair of attached houses. Dated 1896. By Henry Dare Bryan.
Snecked limestone rubble and dressings, tile-hung second
floor, brick ridge and diagonally-set gable stacks and tile
hip and gable roof. Double-depth plan. Queen Anne style. 3
storeys; 2-window range.
A symmetrical pair with the entrances in the sides, projecting
outer gables, and stone-framed ground- and first-floor
windows. Carved doorcases have winged cupid corbels to fluted
half pilasters, 3 Tudor-arched overlights and a dentil
cornice, and an elliptical-arched battened 2-leaf door.
Ground-floor mullion and transom windows, first-floor windows
have plate-glass casements with glazing bars above the
transoms, and second-floor timber windows project slightly on
small brackets.
The gables have 2-storey canted bays with tiled panels and
2-light ground- and first-floor windows below the overhanging
tile-hung gable, which has 3-light windows and a jettied
half-timbered apex. Between the gables the ground floor is
flush with the outer gables with a tiled lean-to roof and
3-light windows, 2-light first-floor windows and 3-light eaves
dormers with half-timbered gables.
The rear elevation is flat with semicircular-arched stair
lights and a single-storey service block.
INTERIOR: hall screen with stained-glass door and side
windows, a black and white tiled hall, elliptical arch to a
dogleg stair with turned balusters and large turned newels,
5-panel doors, cornices and fireplaces.
SUBSIDIARY FEATURES: attached front garden rubble walls and
piers with domed caps. Strongly influencd by Norman Shaw's
Bedford Park, 1881.
(Gomme A, Jenner M and Little B: Bristol, An Architectural
History: Bristol: 1979-: 396).
Listing NGR: ST5655275117
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