The Row is a Grade II listed building in the Newark and Sherwood local planning authority area, England. First listed on 15 October 1984. Cottage. 1 related planning application.
The Row
- WRENN ID
- gaunt-mullion-sorrel
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Newark and Sherwood
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 15 October 1984
- Type
- Cottage
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Row is a terrace of four cottages, dating to the mid-17th century and around 1800. The cottages are built of brick, with a pantile roof and three brick stacks. They have two storeys and an irregular arrangement of windows; six windows to the first floor and ten to the ground floor. Doorways are located at intervals along the front, each with simple surrounds beneath segmental arches. Most ground-floor windows have Yorkshire sashes with glazing bars, also beneath segmental arches, although two small casement windows are present, two windows in from the west. Three similar windows with glazing bars are located on the first floor, to the east. The remaining first-floor windows are casements with glazing bars. A lean-to adjoins the cottages to the east.
To the rear, north of number 4, is an earlier mid-17th century wing constructed of coursed rubble, with a steep, double-pitched pantile roof, hipped where it meets the terrace, and a single brick ridge stack. This wing has one-and-a-half storeys and an irregular fenestration. A doorway with a plain surround under a segmental arch is situated on the south side of this wing, with a 20th-century casement window beneath a segmental arch immediately to its north. Connected to this is a 19th-century projecting, single-storey porch of coursed rubble, ashlar, brick and pantile with a double arched entrance. A 20th-century casement window with a segmental arch is positioned north of the porch, alongside three case-ments to the first floor. The north wall of the wing is coursed rubble to the ground floor and brick to the first floor, featuring ashlar quoins and an ashlar plinth. There is a blocked and damaged stone mullion window with a stone lintel and sill on the ground floor, and to the east a blocked opening, possibly a further mullion window. The garret has a glazing bar Yorkshire sash under a segmental arch, and a small casement to its east. A brick lean-to extends from the east side.
Detailed Attributes
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