The Grange And Attached Wall And Outbuildings is a Grade II listed building in the Bassetlaw local planning authority area, England. First listed on 1 February 1967. House, outbuilding. 3 related planning applications.
The Grange And Attached Wall And Outbuildings
- WRENN ID
- gilded-eave-river
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Bassetlaw
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 1 February 1967
- Type
- House, outbuilding
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Grange is a house with attached wall and outbuildings, including a barn and pigeoncote, dating from the mid-18th century. It was refaced in the mid-19th century, and a rainwater head dated 1747 is visible on the north side. The house is constructed of red brick with some blue and yellow brick detailing, and ashlar dressings. It has a slate roof with two gable and one ridge red brick stack. The gables are raised with tumbled brickwork, and the ashlar coped parapet features a blue brick diaper pattern with some yellow brick infill. The house sits on a plinth with a moulded brick band above. It is two storeys high, with five bays, a first floor band, and a first floor dripmould. A central six-panel door with a glazed overlight leads into the house. There are two glazing bar sashes on either side of the door, with five similar sashes above.
A 14-meter long ashlar-coped red brick wall extends from the left side of the house. Various two-storey extensions are located to the rear. Attached to the rear right are 18th-century buildings, comprising an outbuilding, a barn, and a pigeoncote. These buildings have pantile roofs, dogtooth eaves (with dentil detailing on the pigeoncote), and a single red brick stack to the right gable of the outbuilding. The barn and pigeoncote have raised and brick-coped gables with kneelers.
A single-storey outbuilding to the front of these rear ranges features a small glazing bar sash window under a segmental arch, with a larger similar sash to the right. The two-storey barn features a doorway with a part-glazed door under a segmental arch, a blocked doorway to the right, and a large blocked doorway further right. The two-storey, plus attic, pigeoncote has a wooden door with a round arched over-panel. Pigeon entrances and perches are set under the eaves. A 20th-century brick and pantile single-storey, single-bay outbuilding and two-bay garage also extend from the front.
The interior of the pigeoncote contains brick nesting boxes.
Detailed Attributes
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