Linked Outbuildings And Wall Attached To Left Of Wildon Grange is a Grade II listed building in the County Durham local planning authority area, England. First listed on 17 June 1986. Outbuildings. 3 related planning applications.

Linked Outbuildings And Wall Attached To Left Of Wildon Grange

WRENN ID
knotted-gargoyle-stoat
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
County Durham
Country
England
Date first listed
17 June 1986
Type
Outbuildings
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: EPC · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

The linked outbuildings and wall attached to the left of Wildon Grange are mid to late 19th century structures made of coursed rubble, featuring slate roofs and stone chimney stacks. The wall facing the garden is brick-faced and connects the left side of the house to an L-plan range of outbuildings.

The wall is partly rebuilt and has a flat coping with a central segmental archway. The garden side of the archway includes a projecting keystone and impost blocks.

At the right angle to the left end of the wall is a two-storey, four-bay block. It has an L-plan stone stairway leading to a boarded door on the left. In the third bay, there is a boarded door flanked by 12-pane sash windows, with identical sashes above in the second and fourth bays. The block features a low-pitched hipped roof and lateral chimneys with top bands.

To the right, there is a one-storey, two-bay coach-house. It has a segmental archway with flush voussoirs and alternating jambs on the left, and boarded double doors with flush lintels and jambs on the right. The roof is hipped to the right.

A short section of wall with a doorway is located to the right of the coach-house.

Further to the right, a one-storey, four-bay range has replaced windows and a Dutch door on the right.

There is also a tall, square-plan, two-storey, three-bay block set forward to the right. This block features a ground-floor boarded door with flanking replaced casements, a central 12-pane sash above, and two pigeon holes below the eaves. It has a low-pitched pyramidal roof topped with an iron weather vane, and a blocked, pointed first-floor opening on the right return. A lean-to rear addition is present but is not of special interest.

These buildings are included for their group value.

More on this building

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  • Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
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  • Related listed building consents — 3 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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