Park Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the Newark and Sherwood local planning authority area, England. First listed on 11 August 1961. House. 2 related planning applications.

Park Farmhouse

WRENN ID
drifting-corbel-shade
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Newark and Sherwood
Country
England
Date first listed
11 August 1961
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Park Farmhouse is an 18th-century house, originally an inn, with a dining room added by Joseph Pocklington in 1788. It is constructed of brick, with slate and pantile roofing. The house has gables with bargeboards, three gable, single ridge and two side wall stacks. It is two storeys high, with five bays on the east front and three bays on the dining room side, forming an "L" plan. The east front has five glazing bar sashes with rubbed brick heads on each floor. The dining room, to the right, features a central casement with a segmental head in what was a blocked doorway, flanked by single Venetian windows, also with rubbed brick heads. A 20th-century door is located on the north end. On the south end, to the left, is a 19th-century panelled door with a gabled slate hood on curved brackets, flanked by single glazing bar sashes. A similar door and hood is to the right, with a single glazing bar sash alongside it. Above, on the left, is a blank panel flanked by single glazing bar sashes, and to the right, a glazing bar sash and a blank panel. In the gable above, there is another blank panel. The house’s interior was stripped during a conversion. The dining room is believed to contain a notable 18th-century plaster ceiling.

Detailed Attributes

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