The Cedars is a Grade II listed building in the East Lindsey local planning authority area, England. First listed on 15 May 2000. House.

The Cedars

WRENN ID
winter-pediment-stoat
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
East Lindsey
Country
England
Date first listed
15 May 2000
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

The Cedars is a house dating from the early 18th century, with an addition made around 1830. It is constructed of red brick with a pantile roof, and the later addition features yellow brick with a slate roof, along with ashlar coped gables and gable stacks. The house is two storeys high.

The south front has a symmetrical three-window façade, with rendered and rusticated piers at each corner. The central doorway features a six-panel door with a margin light overlight, all set within a painted pilastered surround. On either side of the door are single glazing bar sashes with stucco lintels. Above, there are three slightly smaller glazing bar sashes, also with stucco lintels. The rear of the later wing has a single glazing bar sash on each floor.

On the west front, there is a doorway to the right with a blocked overlight, and to the left, a glazing bar sash followed by a 20th-century half-glazed door. Above these, there are two sliding sashes. The rear façade has an off-centre doorway with a plank door, flanked by irregular windows, including a large sliding sash on the far right.

Inside, the entrance hall features incised plaster walls, six-panel doors in reeded doorcases with patera, and a wooden staircase with turned balusters and a moulded handrail. The reception rooms on either side have similar doors and doorcases, moulded coving, and shutters. The dining room includes a surviving marble fireplace. The upper floor has similar doorcases and doors, along with original fireplaces and coving. The earlier rear wing retains spine beams, plank doors, and broad floorboards, and there is a 19th-century cast-iron range in the central room, set within an original stone fire surround.

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