Cross Keys Inn is a Grade II listed building in the local planning authority area, England. First listed on 21 October 1987. Inn.
Cross Keys Inn
- WRENN ID
- still-nave-plum
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 21 October 1987
- Type
- Inn
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Cross Keys Inn is a house that has been converted into an inn, dating from the early to mid-19th century, with some minor later additions and alterations. It is constructed from regularly coursed and dressed limestone blocks and features a low-pitched hipped slate roof with wide eaves and an integral red brick chimney stack on the left side. The building stands three storeys tall and has five windows, with a narrower bay set back to the right. The windows are fitted with glazing bar sashes and have plain stone lintels, although the third-floor windows are smaller. There are entrances located in the second and fourth bays from the left, each featuring four-panel doors with panelled reveals and rectangular overlights. The right entrance is framed by a very plain pilastered stone doorcase with a simple entablature. The set-back bay includes an entrance at the front, which has a 20th-century door beneath a 19th-century stone lintel, along with glazing bar sashes on each floor to the right side. The inn is prominently situated at the corner of North Road and Station Road.
Detailed Attributes
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