Manor Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the Newark and Sherwood local planning authority area, England. First listed on 11 August 1961. Farmhouse. 3 related planning applications.

Manor Farmhouse

WRENN ID
muted-lime-hawk
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Newark and Sherwood
Country
England
Date first listed
11 August 1961
Type
Farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: sale history · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

Manor Farmhouse is an early 18th-century farmhouse constructed of red brick with a concrete pantile roof. It features a red brick stack on the left gable and has brick coped gables with kneelers. The eaves are detailed with dentil, raised brick, and dogtooth patterns. The building stands on a partial rubble and brick plinth and includes a first-floor band and a band over the first-floor lintels.

The farmhouse is designed in an L-plan, with two storeys plus a garret and consists of four bays, including a projecting gabled wing to the right. The main entrance has a 20th-century door, and to the right of the doorway is a single glazing bar casement. Above the doorway and casement is a lean-to hood made of wood and concrete pantiles. To the left, there is a blocked doorway and a single tripartite Yorkshire sash, both situated under segmental arches. Above these, there is a similar sash and another glazing bar casement, both also under segmental arches.

The projecting wing features a single small 20th-century glazing bar sash in its side wall and a small 20th-century glazing bar casement to the right. The gable wall of this wing has a blocked doorway with a single 20th-century glazing bar casement above it and a single 20th-century Yorkshire sash in the garret. The rear wall of the wing contains three tripartite glazing bar Yorkshire sashes, with the central sash located in a former doorway. Above these are two similar sashes, all under segmental arches.

Attached to the left of the main front is a one-and-a-half storey plus cellar, three-bay wing, also made of red brick with a concrete pantile roof, featuring a raised brick coped gable and kneeler, and dogtooth eaves. This wing is set on a plinth and has a single blocked cellar opening under a segmental arch to the left. Above this opening is a single 20th-century glazing bar casement in a former doorway, with a single glazing bar fixed light to the left and a smaller similar light further left, all under segmental arches. Above these are two small casements.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 2 transactions since 1997
  • Related listed building consents — 3 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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Nearby listed buildings

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