2-12 Huskisson Street, Liverpool
Introduction
The photograph on this page of 2-12 Huskisson Street, Liverpool by Stephen Richards as part of the Geograph project.
The Geograph project started in 2005 with the aim of publishing, organising and preserving representative images for every square kilometre of Great Britain, Ireland and the Isle of Man.
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Image: © Stephen Richards Taken: 9 Jun 2013
A uniform early C19th terrace, stuccoed in contrast to the bare brick predominant elsewhere in the area. Each three-bay house has some heavier, almost Italianate, detail. Grade II listed. Liverpool's Georgian quarter was laid out by John Foster senior, the Corporation Surveyor, in 1800. He established an attractive network of wide streets which were later filled with handsome brick terraces, mainly of three-storey houses of two or three bays with doorcases of varying styles and windows with painted wedge lintels. Cavalier treatment of the area by the city council for many decades, resulting in the demolition of many listed Georgian buildings, some of which were owned by the council itself, has been reversed over the last decade or so, and Liverpool can still boast one of the most outstanding arrays of Georgian buildings anywhere in the country.