Ulceby Grange is a Grade II listed building in the North Lincolnshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 17 October 1985. House. 1 related planning application.

Ulceby Grange

WRENN ID
distant-foundation-wind
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North Lincolnshire
Country
England
Date first listed
17 October 1985
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Ulceby Grange is a house built in the mid-18th century, with extensions and alterations from the 19th and 20th centuries. The original section is constructed of red brick in Flemish bond, while the right extension is also red brick, and the left and rear extensions are made of yellow brick. The house has slate roofs and is L-shaped in plan, featuring a central entrance hall flanked by extensions on both sides and a two-room rear wing with outshuts at the angle.

The building stands two storeys high and has five windows on the first floor. On either side of the central entrance, there are two-storey single-bay wings that are set back. The central entrance features a recessed six-fielded panel door with a three-pane overlight, framed by a doorcase with panelled pilasters and plain consoles that support a moulded pediment. To the left, there are two 19th-century plate glass sash windows in flush wood architraves, complete with stucco sills and painted rubbed brick flat arches. On the right, there is a late 19th to early 20th-century brick canted bay window with six plate glass sashes, stucco sills, brick flat arches, and a stone-coped parapet. The first floor has 12-pane sash windows in flush wooden architraves, also with stucco sills and painted rubbed brick flat arches. The eaves feature a coved plaster cornice, and the gables are brick coped and tumbled. The house has end stacks.

The left wing has a 20th-century extension at the front and a steeply-pitched roof with an end stack. The right wing has been truncated in the 20th century and has blocked windows on both the ground and first floors, with a brick coped and tumbled gable.

Inside, the entrance hall is adorned with a panelled dado, six-fielded-panel doors within ovolo-moulded eared architraves, a dentilled cornice, and an open well staircase featuring a ramped and wreathed handrail, column-on-vase balusters with square knops, and a panelled dado with a moulded rail. The ground floor to the right has fielded panelling with a moulded dado rail and a dentilled wooden cornice, while the left side features a moulded dado rail with plain panelling below and fielded panelling above, also with a moulded cornice. Throughout the house, there are panelled window shutters and doors in architraves.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 2 transactions since 2017
  • Related listed building consents — 1 application
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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