Number 16 And Adjoining Malthouse is a Grade II listed building in the Mansfield local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 January 1976. House, malthouse.

Number 16 And Adjoining Malthouse

WRENN ID
haunted-cobble-wax
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Mansfield
Country
England
Date first listed
5 January 1976
Type
House, malthouse
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Number 16 and the adjoining malthouse are a house and malthouse located on Church Street in Warsop, dating from the early to mid 18th century. The building is constructed from coursed rubble and dressed stone, topped with a 20th-century pantile roof. It features a single coped gable with kneelers, two gable stacks, and two ridge stacks. The structure is L-shaped, measuring five bays wide and four bays deep, with two to three storeys plus a garret.

The front of the house has a 20th-century door to the left, flanked by sidelights, with a single casement to the left and three casements of varying sizes to the right. Above this, there is a smaller central blank opening flanked by two casements. The south side features a Yorkshire sash window to the left, a 20th-century casement and a blocked door to the right, followed by two lean-to additions. Above, there are two casements and a blocked window. The east gable includes breathers and a 20th-century casement.

The malthouse has a 20th-century garage door to the north, with stone steps to its right, followed by a casement and a door with a heavy stone architrave. Above this, there are two casements and a door, with two additional casements above. The rear of the building has a two-storey 19th-century lean-to addition, with a casement above. The north gable has a single casement for the garret.

Inside, the building features an 18th-century stone Classical fireplace with panelled pilasters and a reeded keystone, an early 19th-century basket grate, and a late 19th-century kitchen range. There is a re-used 18th-century chamfered span beam and a winder stair, along with four 18th-century two-panel doors. The roof was replaced in the 20th century, while the malthouse has a mid-19th-century kingpost roof.

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