Heawood Hall, Heawood House And Heawood Chase is a Grade II listed building in the Cheshire East local planning authority area, England. First listed on 6 July 1984. House. 3 related planning applications.
Heawood Hall, Heawood House And Heawood Chase
- WRENN ID
- winter-spandrel-pearl
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cheshire East
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 6 July 1984
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This property comprises a former hall, now divided into three houses: Heawood Hall, Heawood House, and Heawood Chase. The building has late 17th-century origins with alterations in the early 18th century, followed by further alterations in 1899 and the 20th century. It is constructed of Flemish bond red brick with buff sandstone dressings, and has a hipped roof covered in Welsh slate. Two brick chimneys are present.
Heawood Hall has a three-storey, five-bay front. It features rusticated quoins and partially surviving stone bands at first and second floor levels. The left-hand bay contains two 20th-century sash windows under stone lintels, and a rebated chamfered two-light stone mullioned window in the top storey. A similar window is located above two two-light, square-sectioned stone mullions in the second bay. The central bay has a chamfered stone doorcase with a raised keystone and a moulded flat hood. Above the doorcase are three tall, rebated chamfered stone mullioned windows, which illuminate the stairwell. The fourth bay features raised moulded stone architraves with raised keystones, each containing 20th-century sash windows. The right-hand bay is blank, except for a pair of inserted French doors. The interior staircase has late 17th-century oak treads and panelling with raised fields, although the balusters are late 19th-century turned and the handrail is re-used. A late 18th-century Neo-Classical carved walnut fire surround is found in the drawing room, and the doors have moulded soffits.
Heawood House was converted from a range at the rear of the hall and has a two-and-a-half storey, six-bay east front. A stone band runs along the first floor. Twelve-pane sash windows are set within gauged and rubbed brick heads. A rear central doorway is framed by a simple stone architrave. The front has twin gables, which are now stuccoed and contain circular windows with moulded stone surrounds.
Detailed Attributes
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