Netherleigh House, Yard Walls And Former Coach House is a Grade II listed building in the Cheshire West and Chester local planning authority area, England. First listed on 28 July 1955. Country house, coach house. 12 related planning applications.

Netherleigh House, Yard Walls And Former Coach House

WRENN ID
brooding-moat-thistle
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cheshire West and Chester
Country
England
Date first listed
28 July 1955
Type
Country house, coach house
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Netherleigh House is a small country house dating to around 1800, with extensions added to the rear, likely in the mid-19th century. The front section is built of brown brick in a Flemish bond pattern, while the rear wing has a grey slate roof. The main facade is two storeys high with five windows, and a three-storey rear wing. The house has a painted stone plinth and a portico with two front columns and two half-columns, supported by a Roman Doric style entablature with fluted capitals. The front door consists of eight fielded panels. There are shallow two-storey brick bows either side of the entrance. The ground floor windows are recessed sash windows with 12 panes, while the first floor windows have 15 panes. Two cast-iron rainwater pipes and heads are present, along with a parapet with a full moulded cornice. The rear wing has a hipped roof and recessed four-pane sash windows. The interior, although uninspected, is said to contain an open-well Georgian staircase, doors with six fielded panels, panelled embrasures, and ceiling cornices. Subsidiary features include a stone-walled yard to the right of the house, containing a simple coach house and loft.

Detailed Attributes

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