Ceres Lodge farmhouse, adjoining cottages and stable is a Grade II listed building in the Newark and Sherwood local planning authority area, England. First listed on 20 June 1986. Farmhouse, cottage, stable.
Ceres Lodge farmhouse, adjoining cottages and stable
- WRENN ID
- veiled-rubblework-rook
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Newark and Sherwood
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 20 June 1986
- Type
- Farmhouse, cottage, stable
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Ceres Lodge is a model farmhouse dating from around 1800, constructed of brick that is partly rendered and colourwashed. It includes adjoining cottages and a stable that share a similar style. The building features hipped slate roofs, a plinth, a moulded cornice, eaves, a pediment, and an impost band. It has two side wall stacks, two ridge stacks, and a single gable stack. The structure is two storeys high and consists of a C-plan layout with a total of 1/3/1 bays.
Most of the windows are 20th-century casements, with some in a Gothick style. The central farmhouse has a projecting pedimented bay on the south side, which includes a central parapeted porch with a round-headed opening, flanked by single casements. Above this, there are three casements. The property is enclosed by rendered boundary walls topped with ashlar coping, featuring two pairs of coped square piers with plinths and ball finials, along with two pairs of 20th-century replica iron gates. There is also a semi-circular iron fence and gate with fluted piers and ball finials.
The rear elevation has a full-width hipped lean-to addition with 19th and 20th-century fenestration featuring segmental heads, and a central casement above. The stable to the west is two storeys high with three bays and cogged eaves. It has a single altered casement on each floor to the south, a 20th-century sliding door and a casement to the east, and a central blocked door flanked by single altered casements above.
The cottage to the east has a casement on each floor to the south, a central 20th-century door to the east, and above it, two blank openings, with a Gothick casement to the right. The west front features a late 19th-century lean-to addition with 20th-century fenestration, a Gothick casement to the left, and above, a casement and two Gothick casements to the right. The adjoining late 19th-century cottage to the north has a single ridge stack and a lean-to porch to the west, with an altered central doorway flanked by single Yorkshire sashes. The north gable has a similar sash, all with segmental heads. The east side has a lean-to addition with a single stack, a segmental-headed door, and a casement, with a Gothick casement above.
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