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© N.L. Stones
IoE Number:
380263
Location:
58 QUEEN SQUARE (west side)
BRISTOL, BRISTOL, BRISTOL
Photographer:
N.L. Stones
Date Photographed:
06 October 2002
Date listed:
08 January 1959
Date of last amendment:
30 December 1994
Grade
II
The Images of England website consists of images of listed buildings based on the statutory list as it was in 2001 and does not incorporate subsequent amendments to the list. For the statutory list and information on the current listed status of individual buildings please go to The National Heritage List for England.
BRISTOL
ST5872NE QUEEN SQUARE
901-1/16/215 (West side)
08/01/59 No.58
(Formerly Listed as:
QUEEN SQUARE
(West side)
Nos.56, 57 AND 59-62 (Consecutive))
GV II
Attached house, now offices. c1833. By Henry Rumley. Limestone
ashlar, party wall stacks and pantile roof. Double-depth plan.
Neoclassical style. 3 storeys and attic; 3-window range. Part
of a regular terrace of similar houses; a right-hand doorway,
banded ground floor to a band, frieze, cornice and coped attic
storey. Doorcase has fluted pilasters, entablature and
cornice, rectangular metal fanlight with intersecting circles,
and 4-panel door with roundels. 2 ground-floor windows set in
shallow recessed surrounds, consoles to a pedimented lintel
with acroteria and wreath to the middle first-floor window,
the rest plain, to 6/6-pane sashes, 3/3-pane to the attic.
INTERIOR: extensively refurbished; elliptical hall arch to an
open dogleg winder stair with stick balusters and column
newels, cornices with guilloche and vine leaves, panelled
shutters and 6-panel doors. Built after the destruction of
Queen Square in the 1831 Reform Bill riots.
(Gomme A, Jenner M and Little B: Bristol, An Architectural
History: Bristol: 1979-: 228).