Number 13 And Outbuildings Attached To Rear is a Grade II listed building in the North West Leicestershire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 7 December 1962. A C15-C16 House.

Number 13 And Outbuildings Attached To Rear

WRENN ID
tattered-shingle-cobweb
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North West Leicestershire
Country
England
Date first listed
7 December 1962
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Number 13 is a house with attached outbuildings located on Main Street in Lockington-Hemington. The building features a 15th to 16th century wing on the left, constructed using cruck techniques, and a 17th century post-framed cross wing on the right, creating a T-shaped plan. Much of the exterior has been rebuilt in brick during the 19th century. The outbuilding, dating from the 17th century, has been altered and is roughcast with exposed brick on the right side. It has a rendered plinth and thatched roofs, with rebuilt brick and render chimney shafts flanking the left bay.

The house is 1.5 storeys tall and has three bays, with the right bay gabled and projecting. The left bay features a shop front that was replaced with a three-light barred casement window in the 1990s, a 2-light horizontal sash window with small panes above, and a 19th to early 20th century five-panelled door with a rectangular fanlight. The centre bay has three-light barred wooden casements, with the upper storey window also having small panes, and a 20th century four-panelled door. The right bay includes horizontal sashes, with a three-light window on the ground floor and a two-light window on the first floor, along with a half-glazed door from the 19th to 20th century. The upper left windows are adorned with thatch eyebrows.

The long outbuilding attached to the rear of the right wing is partially timber framed with diagonal braces and brick infill, and partially constructed of 19th century brick with vent slits. It has corrugated iron and asbestos roofs. Inside, the left wing contains cruck trusses flanking the left bay, with one blade of the left truss concealed or missing. This bay also retains original heavy floor joists. The centre bay features a later stop-chamfered spine beam, while the 17th century wing to the right has post framing in the internal walls and small curved wind braces.

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