*** Welcome to piglix ***

Lansdown Crescent, Bath

Lansdown Crescent
Lansdown Crescent Bath.jpg
General information
Architectural style Georgian
Town or city Bath
Country England
Construction started 1789
Completed 1793
Design and construction
Architect John Palmer

Lansdown Crescent is a well-known example of Georgian architecture in Bath, Somerset, England, designed by John Palmer and constructed by a variety of builders between 1789 and 1793. The buildings have a clear view over central Bath, being sited on Lansdown Hill near to, but higher than, other well-known Georgian buildings including the Royal Crescent, St James's Square, Bath and The Circus, Bath.

The crescent was laid out by John Palmer who ensure that the three-storey fronts of the buildings were of uniform height and had matching doors and windows. The attic rooms are under a parapet and slate mansard roof. Other builders were then able to construct the houses behind the facade. The commission was from Charles Spackman, leading to the original name of the terrace being Spackman's Buildings.

During World War I the crescent was frequently painted by Walter Sickert.

An unexploded bomb which had been dropped during the Bath Blitz of World War II was discovered in 2016, which required evacuation of the residents while it was made safe and then safely removed. In 2016 decorative finials from the railings in front of the houses, which had been removed and melted down during World War II were replaced after public fundraising.

The grass in front of the crescent is sometimes used to graze sheep.

The crescent, which is a grade I listed building, comprises 20 houses, each originally having four floors together with servants' quarters in the basement. It is arranged as a concave crescent, and is flanked by Lansdown Place West and Lansdown Place East, both convex crescents and grade II listed buildings in their own right.


...
Wikipedia

...