Estate House, Cedar End and North Side is a Grade II listed building in the North East Derbyshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 31 January 1967. Flats. 2 related planning applications.
Estate House, Cedar End and North Side
- WRENN ID
- hushed-pediment-evening
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- North East Derbyshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 31 January 1967
- Type
- Flats
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is part of a country house, now converted into flats. It is one of two surviving service wings of Wingerworth Hall, which was completed in 1729 and demolished between 1924 and 1927. The house may have been designed by Francis Smith of Warwick. The south facade is constructed of gritstone ashlar, with squared coursed Coal Measures sandstone and ashlar dressings on the sides and rear. It has a lead roof behind a parapet, with two visible ashlar chimney caps. The main section of the south facade is two storeys high with seven bays, featuring chamfered quoins and a plain band below a parapet with coping. The windows are glazing bar sashes in architraves with bracketed sills. Ground-floor windows have round heads with keystones and impost blocks. The central window on the ground floor was formerly a doorway and has a rusticated surround. The current doorway, to its right, was originally a window, with the sill lowered and external stone steps added. Set back to the left is a lower two-storey, two-bay wing in a similar style, claimed to have been built in the 1920s using 18th-century stonework. It has glazing bar sash windows, and in its right-hand bay is a partly glazed door within an architrave. The east wall is three bays wide and has mullioned and transomed cross windows with architraves, except for the outer bay on the ground floor where the mullions and transoms have been removed. The windows on the left-hand bay are blind. The north wall has two bays projecting forwards on the left, with four bays to the right, including a doorway in the left-hand bay. The windows have architraves. On the ground floor, the windows are 20th-century casements, but the first-floor windows retain their original mullions and transoms. The door has six raised and fielded panels with an overlight, and a keystone is featured within the architrave.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- Sale history — 1 transaction since 2024
- Related listed building consents — 2 applications
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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