9 Mill Street, Nantwich

Other brick buildings include Townsend House, the demolished Wilbraham mansion on Welsh Row completed in around 1580, and the Wright's Almshouses of 1638.

[1] In 1866, the District Bank moved to a new building on Churchyard Side by Alfred Waterhouse,[8] and 9 Mill Street returned to private ownership after a period of standing empty.

[11][12][13][14] In red brick with stone dressings, the house has two storeys with attics and basements, under a tiled roof.

The five-bay front (north) face has a central entrance bay, set slightly forwards, which is flanked by brick pilasters and capped with a pediment.

[11] Although the interior plan has been substantially altered from the original town house, many Georgian features have survived on both ground and first floors, including cornices, panelling, architraves around the doors, and the main staircase as well as the attic stairs.

The ground floor features a large restaurant, bar area and 'Garden Room', serving a British and Mediterranean mix of cuisine, along with Classic and on trend cocktails.

9 Mill Street, Nantwich
Detail of entrance and windows
Pediment and parapet