No 21 And Attached Barn To Rear is a Grade II listed building in the West Lindsey local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 July 1985. House with barn.
No 21 And Attached Barn To Rear
- WRENN ID
- quartered-kitchen-umber
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- West Lindsey
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 12 July 1985
- Type
- House with barn
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
No. 21 is a house with an attached barn at the rear, dating from the late 18th century and mid 19th century. It is constructed of red brick and features a hipped pantile roof with a single hip stack and two large ridge stacks at the rear. The building is arranged in an L-plan and stands two and a half storeys tall, with a three-bay front that includes a plinth and a single basement opening with a grill and segmental head on the right side. The central doorway has a painted splayed brick lintel, a rectangular overlight, and a partially glazed door. Flanking the doorway are single 19th-century glazing bar sashes, each with painted splayed brick lintels.
On the left side, there are remnants of 18th-century blocked windows with segmental heads. Above, to the left, is a pair of glazing bar sashes under a single painted splayed brick lintel, along with a remnant of another blocked window. To the right, there are two glazing bar sashes, also with painted splayed brick lintels, and four small plain sashes with segmental heads above. The north side features a two and a half storey bay on the right with two glazing bar sashes, one above the other, both with painted splayed brick lintels, and a small blocked opening above with a segmental head.
At the rear, there is a 19th-century two-storey block with four irregular bays. It includes a large blind round-headed opening on the right with a partially glazed door, flanked by plain glazed openings and a large overlight above. To the left is a glazing bar sash with narrow fixed lights beside it, and another glazing bar sash beyond, both with painted splayed segmental heads. Above, there are three glazing bar sashes, all with painted splayed segmental heads, and a small 20th-century casement with a flat head between the two left windows. The early 19th-century barn features a large opening with a segmental head and plank doors on the right, along with a shuttered opening with a segmental head on the left and six shuttered openings with segmental heads above.
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
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- Flood risk assessment
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