'' by
Thomas Gainsborough Commissioned by
Sir William Pulteney, it was designed by the architect
Thomas Baldwin and completed in 1789. The Corporation of Bath wanted to expand the boundaries of the city, and Sir William's estate was conveniently situated just over the other side of the
River Avon. At over long and wide, the road itself is the widest and the grandest in Bath. However, the architect, Baldwin, designed only the façades of buildings. A variety of owners acquired plots of land along the new street and built the actual structures behind the façades, so that while the street has a visual external unity, the buildings have different internal features, some having been designed as private houses and others as hotels. Numbers 1 to 7 were a single government office, now designated as a Grade I
listed building. Numbers 41A and 42 to 77 have also been Grade I listed. It was foreseen that, along with the access provided by Pulteney Bridge, the eastern side of the Avon would become popular with speculators and developers. This appears not to have been the case, and in the event no further developments were made on this scale. Indeed, one of the side streets off Great Pulteney Street, called Sunderland Street, is the shortest street in the city, with only one address. After 1789, the financial climate did not encourage further building, as the
Panic of 1797, related to a period of deflation between 1793 and 1800, was followed by the
Napoleonic Wars and the
Depression of 1807. Bath was also affected by a serious flood in 1809, which would have inundated the basements in Great Pulteney Street as well as the surrounding fields. When first built, the street was lined with trees, which in autumn caused some problems with leaf litter. When asked to solve this problem the town council opted to simply cut most of the trees down. In aerial photos held by
Historic England it can be seen that the trees were present from at least 1920 until 1953. The adjacent
Laura Place had a much smaller number of trees which still remain. The fountain area (also known as Laura Place) was initially not part of the original plan. After completion of the main street in 1877, local residents petitioned and successfully raised significant funds to build a grand column (rather like
Nelson's Column in London). However, as construction of the column started, the residents realised that the addition would tower over the area (it would be 50% taller than the houses), and so they then petitioned for it to be cancelled. After some negotiations, the (half-built) column was pulled down and the much smaller fountain added instead. The centrepiece of the original Laura place fountain was damaged beyond repair during
freshers' week in 1969 and replaced with a modern design in 1970. Drawings of all the building plans (including many proposals that were never built) can be viewed in the
Victoria Art Gallery situated on the corner of
Pulteney Bridge and the Grand Parade. In light of the
Black Lives Matter movement in 2020, there has been some discussion of renaming the street in
The Bath Magazine and in
Bath Newseum, but so far no local consultation on this has actually started. ==Architecture==