Grange Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the Rutland local planning authority area, England. First listed on 6 July 1987. House.

Grange Farmhouse

WRENN ID
silent-pewter-river
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Rutland
Country
England
Date first listed
6 July 1987
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Grange Farmhouse is a house dated 1706, as indicated by a plaque, with a rear wing added in the late 18th to early 19th century, forming an L-plan. The building is constructed of coursed limestone rubble, featuring limestone quoins and dressings. It has a 20th-century tile roof with coped gables and moulded kneelers, along with ashlar chimneys. The house has a lobby entry plan and is two storeys tall with a ventilated attic and cellar, comprising three bays.

The exterior includes a chamfered plinth and limestone bands at the sill and lintel levels. Windows are ovolo-moulded mullions with cyma recta cornices and leaded glazing. The left bay features three-light windows, the right bay has two-light windows, and the centre bay includes a two-storey canted bay with five-light windows and corbels for a demolished gable. There is a blocked single light between the right bays above a 19th-century flush-panelled door with a wooden cornice hood. The date plaque with a cornice is situated between the right bays above the blocked doorway.

The gables have pairs of square chimney shafts with cornices, and another single shaft is located between the right bays. The left gable end has blocked single lights on both sides without cornices, and a small attic light with a ventilation brick. The right gable end features irregular single lights and a two-light cellar window. There is a staircase projection at the rear in line with the central stack. A 19th-century wing is attached to the rear of the left bay, along with a single-storey extension. Inside, the centre bay contains a large fireplace with chamfered stone jambs and a stop-chamfered spine beam, along with 18th-century two-panel doors.

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