5-13, Mansfield Street W1 London, England
Listed Building Data
5-13, Mansfield Street W1 has been designated a Grade II* listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.
- List Entry ID
- 1273679
- Listing Type
- listed building
- Grade
- II*
- Date Listed
- 10 September 1954
- Name
- 5-13, MANSFIELD STREET W1
- Location
- 5-13, MANSFIELD STREET W1
- District
- City of Westminster
- County
- Greater London Authority
- Grid Reference
- TQ 28714 81648
- Easting
- 528714.0000
- Northing
- 181648.0000
Description
Large terraced "1st rate" town houses, 1770-75 by Robert and James Adam as speculative development for the Portland Estate. Stock brick with rusticated stucco ground floors (Adam patent); slate roofs concealed. Unified row of well proportioned astylar elevations distinguished by design of entrances.
Listed Building Description
Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.
TQ 2881 NE CITY OF WESTMINSTER MANSFIELD STREET, W1 45/85 (west side)
10.9.54 Nos. 5 to 13 (odd)
G.V. II*
Large terraced "1st rate" town houses, 1770-75 by Robert and James Adam as speculative development for the Portland Estate. Stock brick with rusticated stucco ground floors (Adam patent); slate roofs concealed. Unified row of well proportioned astylar elevations distinguished by design of entrances. For No. 15 (a facsimile rebuild) see separate item. 4 storeys and basement (the top floor as attic storey). Broad 3-window wide fronts. Broad doorways adjoining to right and left of each pair; Nos. 5 and 7 and 13 and 15 with semicircular arched openings framing a Venetian window derived composition: panelled doors, side lights flanked by slender Ionic columns and pilaster jambs, entablatures (some enriched) and archivolted inner fanlight and delicately patterned radial glazing to outer overall fanlight; Nos. 9 and 11 have semicircular arched doorways with panelled doors and side lights flanked by Ionic pilasters and patterned fanlights, the whole framed by attached Ionic columns, friezes festooned over doorways and fluted over sidelights, crowning cornices. Recessed sashes (later small pane glazing bars to No, 13), under flat gauged arches to upper floors. Plat band finishing off stuccowork to 1st floor and 1st floor sill band (broken by windows at Nos. 5 to 11); main stucco cornice over 2nd floor and attic cornice and blocking course. Nos. 5, 7 and 9 have continuous delicate cast iron balconies across 1st floor, No. 11 has similar 1st floor window guards. Cast and wrought iron area railings with arrow heads and urn finials. Very fine interiors to all houses with stone geometrical wrought iron balustrade top lit staircases; delicate Adam plaster mouldings, probably by Joseph Rose who was head leaseholder and builder of No. 7; inlaid and statuary marble chimneypieces; mahogany doors etc. For the associated garden elevations of the mews buildings designed to be seen from the rear of these Mansfield Street houses, see Nos. 5 to 9 consec. Mansfield Mews. No. 13 was the residence of J.L. Pearson and the home and office of Sir Edwin Lutyens. Part of an exceptionally unified "1st rate" development with the Adams Nos. 16 to 22 (even) opposite and Nos. 61 and 63 New Cavendish Street q,v. by John Johnson closing the north vista.
Listing NGR: TQ2871481648