11A and 12-15, York Street Bath, England

Listed Building Data

11A and 12-15, York Street 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shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.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
1395815
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II
Date Listed
12 June 1950
Name
11A AND 12-15, YORK STREET
Location
11A AND 12-15, YORK STREET
District
Bath and North East Somerset
Grid Reference
ST 75157 64731
Easting
375157.0000
Northing
164731.0000

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

YORK STREET 656-1/41/1934 (North side) Nos.11A AND 12-15 (Consec) 12/06/50

GV II

Terrace of shops with accommodation over, now offices and art galleries. c1819; possibly with front by William Wilkins. MATERIALS: Limestone ashlar, with Welsh slate roof. PLAN: Double depth plan. EXTERIOR: Greek Revival terrace of two storeys, eleven bays to whole arranged four:three:four, with a projecting pedimental centre-piece of three bays. Giant Doric pilasters running through two floors, carrying an entablature. Windows to ground floor are six:six casements flanked on either side with square colonnettes in jambs, except for twelve which has one six light window and one tripartite casement as centrepiece, six:six:six. First floor windows are all six/six sashes. Four panel doors with tripartite lights over. INTERIORS: Not inspected. It was converted to commercial use in 1975. HISTORY: Probably built at the same time as Wilkins's Masonic Hall across the street, which it closely echoes, stylistically; however, the centres of the two buildings are not aligned which compromises the harmony and precision of this unusual piece of Greek Revival town planning. No direct connection with Wilkins is known of. Nonetheless, a notable instance of highly fashionable and scholarly Grecian design as applied to fairly small-scale and non-institutional buildings. It is evident from the projecting masonry toothing on the second floor of No.16 to the east that this terrace was built after the previous intention to continue Nos.16-19 (qv) further west was abandoned. SOURCES: J. Orbach, Card Index of Bath Architects and Streets (1978); N. Jackson, Nineteenth Century Bath - Architects and Architecture (1991), 47; Bath Archaeological Trust/RCHM England, Georgian Bath Historical Map (1989); G. Field, Shopfront Record, Bath City Council (1992).

Listing NGR: ST7515764731