Ivington Court And Attached Barns And Hop Kilns is a Grade II listed building in the Herefordshire, County of local planning authority area, England. First listed on 9 February 1973. Farmhouse.
Ivington Court And Attached Barns And Hop Kilns
- WRENN ID
- drifting-grate-sepia
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Herefordshire, County of
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 9 February 1973
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Ivington Court is a farmhouse that dates from the 16th, 17th, and 19th centuries. It features painted brick and roughcast with a plain tile roof that has a gable on the right front. The building has a rubble stack with spurred composite brick chimneys on the right and a brick stack at the rear.
The exterior is two storeys high and has a four-window range. It includes late 19th-century 2/2 sash windows under timber lintels and brick dentilled eaves, along with a 19th-century 8/8 sash window in the gable. The entrance is located to the centre left and consists of a late 19th-century glazed and panelled door with sidelights, set under a pentice-roofed porch supported by chamfered posts and a brick dwarf wall. To the left of the entrance are two late 19th-century 2/2 sashes beneath gauged brick flat arches, and to the right is a late 19th-century 8/8 sash.
On the right side, the wall is roughcast and features a tier of 6/6 sashes in moulded cases. The rear wing is plastered and includes an 18th-century casement window, along with painted rubble that has a larger 18th-century casement with some leaded lights and a 19th-century fixed light. The gable end is timber-framed from the 17th century and has an 18th-century leaded light. There is also a timber-frame and brick lean-to with a 19th-century plank door.
Inside, the property has an ogee stop-chamfered ceiling frame and a corner fireplace. The attached barn to the left is made of sandstone rubble with a plain tile roof and a gable at the rear. It features various openings under brick arches and stone steps leading to a porch door beneath a plain tiled gable roof. There is an additional bay to the left that is constructed from brick, rubble, timber-frame, and weatherboarding, topped with a corrugated-iron roof and includes a waggonway.
At the rear, there are hop kilns with a two-unit plan, built in the 19th century from brick and topped with Welsh slate pyramidal roofs. They have a plank door and two barred lights set under polychrome brick segmental arches.
More on this building
Sign in or create a free account to unlock:
- No EPC on record for this property
- Sale history — 4 transactions since 1998
- No related consent applications matched
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.
Nearby listed buildings
- Ivy Croft
- Chipps House and attached Hop Kilns
- Bridge Over River Arrow at So 47445 5705 North East
- Gatehouse and Barns to West of Ivington Bury Farmhouse
- Bridge Over Tributary of River Arrow at So 4753 5674 North East
- Bury Cottages
- Ivington Bury Farmhouse
- Barns to North of Ivington Bury Farmhouse
- Bridge Over Tributary of River Arrow at So 4754 5734 North East
- Surviving Wing at Manor Farm