White Gates is a Grade II listed building in the Rushcliffe local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 November 1986. Farmhouse.
White Gates
- WRENN ID
- quartered-cloister-hyssop
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Rushcliffe
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 14 November 1986
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
White Gates is a farmhouse, now a house, dating from the mid-17th century and 18th century, with alterations and a rear addition made around 1935. The building is constructed of brick and coursed rubble, with some remnants of timber framing, and features plain and pantile roofs. It has a coursed rubble plinth and remains of a first-floor band at the west end. The eaves are partially dentillated, and there are two coped gables, one of which has kneelers. The structure has a single gable, three ridge stacks, and a single rear wall stack. It is two storeys high and has six bays.
The windows are leaded casements, some of which have timber mullions. The northwest front includes a single-storey, single-bay lean-to addition on the left, followed by six casements of various sizes. To the right of these is a 20th-century brick porch with a hipped plain tile roof and a casement. Above the porch, there are five casements. The west gable features a porch with an arched doorway on the left, a small casement to its right, and a bay window with a hipped plain tile roof, leaded glazing, and a French window. Above this bay window are two 18th-century leaded casements.
On the southeast front, there is an off-centre two-storey stair turret with a coped gable and kneelers. To the right is a 20th-century two-storey rear wing with a hipped roof, and to the left are three casements. The stair turret has a single casement, and to its right is a 20th-century door and casement. Above, there are two casements on the left and one on the right.
Inside, on the west side, there is a single bay post with a strut, two cambered span beams, stop-chamfered span beams, and two fireplace bressumers. There are two early 17th-century framed panelled doors, one with a carved fluted panel, along with original jambs. The interior also features four 18th-century plank doors, a salt cupboard with a chip carved door, and an early 19th-century Adam style hob grate with a Delft tile surround, set in a chip carved 17th-century surround with a carved panelled overmantel.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
- No related consent applications matched
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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