110, Shucknall Hill is a Grade II listed building in the Herefordshire, County of local planning authority area, England. First listed on 19 June 1991. Cottage.
110, Shucknall Hill
- WRENN ID
- turning-footing-pearl
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Herefordshire, County of
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 19 June 1991
- Type
- Cottage
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
No. 110 is a cottage located on Shucknall Hill, dating from the late 17th century or early to mid 18th century, with a refronting that occurred in the late 19th century. The building features a timber frame with plastered wattle panels, faced in red brick on the southeast front, and sits on a stone rubble plinth. It has a thatched roof with gabled ends and a stone rubble outshut with a plain tile roof. A large stone stack is positioned at the northeast end, complete with set offs and a brick shaft.
The cottage has a two-room plan with direct entry into the left-hand (northeast) room, which is heated by a large gable end stack, while the right-hand (southwest) room remains unheated. There is a later outshut on the right (southwest) end, and the ground at the rear (southeast) slopes steeply downwards.
The building is one storey with an attic. The northwest front displays exposed large framing, featuring a circa 19th-century plank door to the left of centre and a small window to the left of the door. The northeast end showcases a large stack with a corrugated iron sheet lean-to roof over the oven. The southwest end includes a plank door at the end of the outshut, which has a lean-to tile roof, and a small 19th-century casement window above in the gable. At the rear (southeast), there are two 19th-century two-light casements with glazing bars set in segmental-headed openings with brick sills.
Inside, the left-hand (northeast) room features a thin chamfered axial beam with run-out stops and a late 19th-century iron range in the fireplace. The right-hand (southwest) room has a chamfered axial beam and exposed wall and partition framing. The attic chambers have a central partition and gable ends that support exposed purlins and a diagonal ridgepiece, along with light scantling wind braces and various old plank doors.
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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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