Latitude: 51.4539 / 51°27'14"N
Longitude: -2.6041 / 2°36'14"W
OS Eastings: 358117
OS Northings: 172941
OS Grid: ST581729
Mapcode National: GBR C6K.0N
Mapcode Global: VH88M.TQ49
Plus Code: 9C3VF93W+H8
Entry Name: Royal Colonnade
Listing Date: 8 January 1959
Grade: II*
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1282279
English Heritage Legacy ID: 379642
ID on this website: 101282279
Location: Bristol, BS1
County: City of Bristol
Electoral Ward/Division: Central
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Bristol
Traditional County: Gloucestershire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Bristol
Church of England Parish: Bristol St Stephen with St James and St John the Baptist with St Michael and St George
Church of England Diocese: Bristol
Tagged with: Architectural structure
BRISTOL
ST5872NW GREAT GEORGE STREET
901-1/15/99 (North West side)
08/01/59 Nos.12-18 (Even)
Royal Colonnade
GV II*
Terrace of 4 houses, now offices. c1826. Possibly by RS Pope.
Limestone ashlar with party wall stacks, roof not visible.
Double-depth plan. Neoclassical style.
Each of 3 storeys and basement; 3-window range. A composed
terrace of projecting end houses linked by a colonnade of
Ionic columns, spaced 1:2:2:1 to each house, to an entablature
and balustrade of square balusters and panels with wreaths.
The upper floors have pilasters from a plat band, to a frieze,
cornice and parapet. End doorways have pilasters to an
entablature and cornice and semicircular arches, and paired
central doorways have semicircular-arched architraves, to
fanlights and 6-panel doors. Plain ground-floor windows behind
the colonnade, architraves to the rest, ground-floor cornices,
and console cornices to the first-floor windows behind the
colonnade; 8/8-pane sashes, 4/8-panes on the second floor.
INTERIOR: entrance hall with an elliptical arch to a central
stair hall with a lateral dogleg winder stair with stick
balusters and a banded rail, set in a bowed party wall, and
top lit by an oval lantern; basement range in keyed fire
surround; marble fireplaces; egg-and-dart mouldings,
architraves with roundels to 6-panel doors.
Probably Bristol's first Neoclassical terrace; attributed to
Pope on the basis of the characteristically irregular
colonnade, and use of wreath motif.
(Mowl T: To Build the Second City: Bristol: 1991-: 140; Gomme
A, Jenner M and Little B: Bristol, An Architectural History:
Bristol: 1979-: 230).
Listing NGR: ST5815972919
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