Lloyd Square

The square has mature trees, flowers, beds and shrubs and is lined by neat hedges and formal railings, which are listed.

[2] The listing for the short row starting with 14 describes a terrace of ten semi-detached, linked, villas of 1832 on the upper (north) side.

Brown and "gold" stock bricks, some darkened by coal pollution chiefly before the Clean Air Act 1956 and accumulation of less-dark hydrocarbon/diesel particulates, are set in Flemish bond for the house walls with classical stucco dressings and one grand pediment per pair.

The roofs, often extended are above gables and feature Welsh and false slate, parts being obscured by parapet walls; they have brick central chimney stacks.

[2] The dimensions and colours are of a restrained Greek Revival style: two-storeys with a basement; two main projecting window-bays per front per floor, and a recessed small-window entrance bay coupled as a link.

Some of the houses, fronting.
Garden internally