Number 143 And Attached Cottage And Chapel is a Grade II listed building in the Rushcliffe local planning authority area, England. First listed on 13 October 1966. House, cottage, chapel.

Number 143 And Attached Cottage And Chapel

WRENN ID
unlit-span-flax
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Rushcliffe
Country
England
Date first listed
13 October 1966
Type
House, cottage, chapel
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Number 143 and the attached cottage and chapel, now a single house and garage, are located on Main Street in Sutton Bonington. The house dates from the mid 17th century and early 18th century, the cottage from the early 19th century, and the chapel was built in 1832. The house features an 18th-century front made of red brick with some blue brick chequering, along with ashlar and render. It has a slate roof and includes a single ridge and right gable brick stacks from the 20th century. The gables are ashlar coped with kneelers, and there is an eaves band and an ashlar plinth that is rendered over. The first and second floors have dentil and raised brick bands that rise over the stair windows and extend to the left gable wall. The building is two storeys plus a garret and has three bays. Each floor contains two tripartite glazing bar Yorkshire sashes, with single central two-light casements forming stair lights; the first-floor windows are smaller.

Attached to the right is a two-storey, two-bay cottage made of red brick and slate. It has a single tripartite glazing bar casement and a doorway with a panelled door to the right, with a single tripartite glazing bar Yorkshire sash above. Next to this is the chapel, built of red brick and concrete pantiles, now serving as a garage, with ashlar dressings. The chapel features an ashlar coped gable with kneelers facing the road, and an ashlar band that forms a pediment in the gable. It is also two storeys and three bays, with a central doorway that has a panelled door. Flanking the doorway are large fixed glazing bar lights, with two smaller glazing bar sashes above, all featuring flush wedge brick lintels. An ashlar plaque above the doorway is inscribed "T. King Primitive Methodist Chapel 1832". At the rear of the 18th-century building is a 17th-century wing, which has an interior that retains remains of a single post, a few studs, a tie beam, and two curved braces, along with a smoke hood and some chamfered beams.

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Nearby listed buildings

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  2. Barn at Number 143a Grade II 30 m
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  7. Church of St Michael Grade II* 116 m
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