Hampton Manor And Attached Walls And Gate Piers is a Grade II listed building in the Herefordshire, County of local planning authority area, England. First listed on 27 July 1994. House. 1 related planning application.

Hampton Manor And Attached Walls And Gate Piers

WRENN ID
dreaming-glass-dust
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Herefordshire, County of
Country
England
Date first listed
27 July 1994
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Hampton Manor is a house dating from the mid-18th century, with additions from the 19th century. It is constructed of brick, with a hipped roof covered in Welsh slate. The roof has two brick ridge stacks and a stack to the rear. The house is two storeys high, originally with a three-window front: a central six-over-six sash window flanked by tripartite windows with sashes of two-over-two, two-over-six, and two-over-two. There are four blocked openings, all under segmental arches. The building has deep boarded eaves and rusticated quoins. The central entrance has a part-glazed door within a rusticated quoined stucco doorcase, flanked by blocked openings and two early 20th-century bay windows with mullion and transom casements, and a further blocked opening. A storeyband runs above. A brick lean-to is attached to the rear of the right-hand return. On the left-hand return, a storeyband is visible above a blocked opening. A seven-panel door is set under a moulded flat hood resting on scrolled brackets and fluted pilasters, and is flanked by 19th-century narrow lights under gauged brick arches, one of which is in 19th-century condition. To the left of this, a row of sashes with six-over-six and eight-over-eight panes, all under segmental arches, is visible. The interior contains a 19th-century dogleg staircase with stick balusters. On the first floor, there are 19th-century fireplaces, ceiling cornices, four-panel doors with architraves, picture rails, and dado rails. On the ground floor, there are four-panel doors with architraves, a dresser, a wall cupboard, a coved alcove, a coved ceiling, a 19th-century marble fireplace, and a timber-framed panel. There are 18th-century brick walls and rusticated gate piers, with 20th-century gates leading to mews cottages. The group value of the building is enhanced by its associated walls and gate piers.

Detailed Attributes

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