Ockbrook House And Attached Outbuilding is a Grade II listed building in the Erewash local planning authority area, England. First listed on 2 May 1986. House, outbuilding.
Ockbrook House And Attached Outbuilding
- WRENN ID
- pale-alcove-ivy
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Erewash
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 2 May 1986
- Type
- House, outbuilding
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Ockbrook House and its attached outbuilding are a house and outbuildings located in Ockbrook. The house dates from the late 18th century, with additions from the mid-19th century and alterations from the early 20th century. The outbuildings are from the early 18th and 19th centuries. The structure is built of red brick with gauged brick dressings and features a hipped graduated slate roof with a central brick ridge stack and a dentilled cornice on the house. The additions and outbuildings have plain tile roofs with brick ridge stacks, while the early 18th-century section has steeply pitched brick coped gables.
The house is three storeys high and has three bays, with a line of outbuildings attached to the rear, including an early 18th-century section in the center. The main elevation features an original panelled door with a plain fanlight, sheltered by a low mid-19th-century painted stone porch. On either side of the door are early 20th-century semi-circular bow windows with leaded lights. Above the door, there are glazing bar sash windows with segment heads on either side and a 20th-century cross window below the original head in the center, which has been lengthened at the bottom. Above, there are two smaller glazing bar sash windows, also below segment heads, and a central glazing bar casement window in its original opening.
The mid-19th-century additions on the north elevation and at the rear feature glazed double doors with Gothick tracery and returned hoodmoulds. The range of outbuildings at the rear has irregular 20th-century openings, except for an original 18th-century first-floor window on the north elevation of the central part. Inside the house, there is an 18th-century style knopped staircase, which is not original to the building.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
- No related consent applications matched
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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