Stone Lodge is a Grade II listed building in the Harborough local planning authority area, England. First listed on 15 January 2002. A C1880 House. 1 related planning application.

Stone Lodge

WRENN ID
ghost-chamber-plover
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Harborough
Country
England
Date first listed
15 January 2002
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Stone Lodge is a house dating from around 1880, originally shown on Ordnance Survey maps as Stone Cottage. It was built as the north lodge to Nevill Holt Hall, likely after the Cunard family acquired the estate in 1876. The house is constructed from coursed rubble stone with stone dressings and has a parapeted roof covered in stone slates. Decorative moulded ashlar stacks rise above the roofline. Designed in a Jacobean style, it features stone-coped gables with finials.

The single-storey building has a two-window front. The windows are stone mullion and transom windows with leaded lights. Two gables face the front, with the left-hand gable projecting forward. A stone open porch with piers featuring carved capitals and basket arches provides access to the front door. To the right, there is a further gable with a two-light window and a single-light window beyond. To the left, a similar gable sits above a two-light window, and a later 20th-century flat-roofed garage extension projects. Behind the garage is a small range with a gabled roof, featuring a moulded ashlar central ridge stack. The interior of the building has not been inspected.

Detailed Attributes

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