Number 35 And Adjoining Malthouse, Kiln And Stable is a Grade II listed building in the Newark and Sherwood local planning authority area, England. House, malthouse, stable. 3 related planning applications.
Number 35 And Adjoining Malthouse, Kiln And Stable
- WRENN ID
- wild-keep-khaki
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Newark and Sherwood
- Country
- England
- Type
- House, malthouse, stable
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Number 35 and the adjoining malthouse, kiln, and stable date from the late 18th century and early 19th century, with alterations made in the mid-19th century and late 20th century.
The main house is of brick construction, featuring a hipped slate roof and two side wall stacks. It has a plinth, a first-floor band, and dentillated eaves. The three-storey main block has three windows, with a projecting centrepiece topped by a pediment. The windows are largely 12-pane sashes, with a plain sash above a left-hand window and two 6-pane sashes to the right; all have flat arches. A central wooden doorcase incorporates scrolled brackets to the pediment and a half-glazed, panelled door with a fanlight. Canted brick bay windows are positioned on either side of the front, each with 12-pane sashes. A three-storey addition stands to the left, with a segment-headed fixed glazing bar light above a 16-pane sash and a 12-pane sash and planked door (segment headed) below. A two-storey hipped wing is to the right, featuring a 6-pane sash and, below, a segment-headed 12-pane sash and a 20th-century door with a gabled canopy. A further single-storey hipped addition extends to the right again.
The adjoining malthouse, now a store, is a two-storey structure with an 8x3 bay layout, sporting a hipped pantile roof and dentillated eaves. The courtyard front features a plank door reached by stone steps; to its right are two small segment-headed openings. Below this are central plank doors with a wooden lintel, flanked to the left by a single plank door and to the right by a segment-headed window. The rear elevation has seven small glazing bar sliding windows.
The disused kiln, located at the left end, rises three storeys with a hipped pantile roof and two elaborate metal cowls. It has four segment-headed barred openings on the upper level, and two similar flat-headed openings above them. The ground floor has three 20th-century casements.
The adjoining stable, to the left, has two segment-headed hatches and, below, two sets of garage doors with wooden lintels, flanked to the left by two blocked doors and a segment-headed window.
Inside the house, a softwood open-well staircase with winders features stick balusters, a ramped and scrolled handrail. The ground floor left front room contains a moulded cornice with acanthus and a 19th-century marble, Classical fireplace. Several moulded 6-panel doors are also present. The malthouse’s basement has segmental brick arches supported by round brick piers. Gypsum plaster floors and round iron piers are found on upper storeys. The malthouse has a strutted softwood queen post truss roof. The kiln has an exposed queen post truss roof.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- Sale history — 2 transactions since 2006
- Related listed building consents — 3 applications
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.