Normanton Grange And The Mews is a Grade II listed building in the Rushcliffe local planning authority area, England. First listed on 13 November 1986. House, stable block. 9 related planning applications.

Normanton Grange And The Mews

WRENN ID
riven-marble-sage
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Rushcliffe
Country
England
Date first listed
13 November 1986
Type
House, stable block
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Normanton Grange is a mid-18th century house with an attached stable block, the stable block now converted into a house. Later 18th century, 19th century, and 20th century extensions and alterations have been made. The main house is rendered over red brick, with a plain tile roof to most sections, although the left two bays have a slate roof. It sits on a plinth. The mid-18th century section has rendered coped gables with kneelers, two external gable stacks, and dentil eaves. Bands mark the first and second floors. The building is two and a half storeys and originally had two bays. To the left is an early 19th century, two-storey, two-bay wing with an external left gable stack. To the right is a lower, late 18th century, two-storey, two-bay wing with a rendered coped right gable and bands continuing from the mid-18th century build; the second floor band is broken above the first floor window in this section. The original mid-18th century section incorporates two glazing bar sashes. To the left is a late 19th century canted bay with a conical lead roof, a single glazing bar sash, and smaller similar sashes in the side walls. A doorway features a six-panel door, pilaster strips supporting a panelled frieze and hood. A single glazing bar sash is on the far right. Above, there are two glazing bar sashes to the left, two larger sashes, and a single sash to the right. The top floor has two smaller, similar sashes. A two-storey, single-bay lean-to is attached to the right, featuring a fixed light and a single glazing bar sash above. At the rear left, a two-storey, three-bay wing projects, with a hipped plain tile roof. The re-entrant angle between this wing and the main front has a single-storey splayed porch with a six-panel door and decorative fanlight. To the rear right is a red brick and pantile two-storey wing leading to a single-storey, red brick and slate wing. Projecting from this is a mid-19th century red brick former stable block, converted in the 20th century, with a hipped slate roof, lateral red brick stacks, and a wooden louvred ridge vent, all with altered openings.

More on this building

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  • Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
  • Sale history — 1 transaction since 2021
  • Related listed building consents — 9 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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Nearby listed buildings

  1. Avenue Farmhouse and Attached Wall and Gate Piers Grade II 73 m
  2. Normanton House Grade II 126 m
  3. Church of St Mary the Virgin Grade I 855 m
  4. The Old Rectory Grade II 861 m
  5. Plumtree War Memorial Grade II 879 m
  6. Gateway and Wall to the Old Rectory Grade II 888 m
  7. Hall Farmhouse Grade II 894 m
  8. Stable Block and Attached Wall and Gateway at the Old Rectory Grade II 906 m
  9. Manor Farmhouse Grade II 1.1 km
  10. Roclaveston Manor St Hugh's College Grade II 2.1 km