Listed Building: NUMBER 8 AND GRAYS DISPENSARY (463338)
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| Grade | II | 
|---|---|
| LBSUID | 463338 | 
| Date assigned | 13 October 1975 | 
| Date last amended | 
Description
                    
YORK
SE6052SW                  DUNCOMBE PLACE           1112-1/27/301             (South East side)           13/10/75                  No.8                                     and Gray's Dispensary
GV                        II
Formerly known as: The York Dispensary DUNCOMBE STREET.           Medical dispensary and offices. 1897-99. By Edmund Kirby of           Liverpool. For Messrs Gray, Dodsworth and Cobb, Solicitors.           MATERIALS: red brick in English garden-wall bond with moulded           brick dressings and window mullions and transoms of stone;           plain tile roofs, turreted and gabled, with brick stacks;           terracotta and wrought-iron finials and snake weathervane.           STYLE: Jacobethan Revival.           EXTERIOR: 2 storeys, basement and attics; 13-window front on           high plinth. Blocked segment-headed openings in plinth.           Projecting centre bay has half panelled double doors with           original furniture and 4 tiers of glazed arcaded lights in           4-centred multi-order arch of moulded brick: spandrels carved           with stylised flowers and foliage, dated 1788, 1899 to left           and right respectively. Upper storeys form 2-storey canted bay           window with half-hexagonal pointed roof. Over doorway is band           of blind arcaded tracery and stone panel carved in relief with           the City arms and a scroll bearing the words YORK DISPENSARY.           Left end bay is set back and treated as square turret with           pyramidal roof. Carriageway with shallow 2-centred arch closed           by wrought-iron double gates beneath stone panel with PATIENTS           ENTRANCE carved in low relief: 3-light windows with transoms           on upper floors. Projecting gabled bays on either side of           central doorway articulated by half hexagonal shafts rising           full height to coped gable with kneelers surmounted by           finials. First floor has 3-light windows, three to left, two           to right; attics segment-headed lights, in 3 tiers to left, 2           tiers to right. In centre of tripled bays at right end is           multi-order doorway with double doors of pegged-on panelling           and original furniture, and arcaded overlight with leaded           lights. Over door is 3-light window with transoms behind           arcaded parapet of traceried round arches of moulded brick.           Gabled bay to left has two 2-light ground and first floor           windows with transoms and 5-light attic window. Turreted bay           to right has narrow transomed windows on all floors, with           square heads in segmental arches on ground and attic floors,           flat lintels on first floor. Between projecting bays are           2-light windows with transoms on ground and first floors,           dormers with square lattice sashes to attic. Above first floor           windows is full-width blind traceried frieze of moulded brick,           continued across right return. Roll moulded brick sill strings           and string courses likewise returned.           Right return: 3-storey 3-bay gabled front. Basement openings           glazed. Ground floor windows are of 3 stepped lights with
transoms recessed in semicircular arches of moulded brick.           Polygonal shafts corbelled out between windows rise to           4-centred arch beneath crow-stepped gable. On first floor,           4-light oriel window is flanked by 3-light windows, all with           transoms. Second floor window is of three tiers of           segment-headed lights. Brick coped gable end has brick           kneelers incorporating rainwater gutter spouts.           INTERIOR: former dispensary staircase rises to attics, with           moulded close string, sturdy turned balusters, chamfered           newels with finials and pendants, and moulded handrail. Framed           newel staircase rises through offices from ground floor to           attics, having moulded close string, twisted balusters and           moulded handrail. Panelled doors in fluted and fasciated           architraves survive throughout building: moulded cornices           retained despite later subdivisions.
Listing NGR: SE6016852086
                
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Location
| Grid reference | SE 60167 52086 (point) | 
|---|---|
| Map sheet | SE65SW | 
Related Monuments/Buildings (1)
Record last edited
Jan 11 2007 3:00PM