Green Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the Shropshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 18 March 1986. Farmhouse. 1 related planning application.
Green Farmhouse
- WRENN ID
- narrow-cobble-plum
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Shropshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 18 March 1986
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Green Farmhouse is a farmhouse dating from the early 17th century, with alterations from the late 19th century and additions from the 20th century. The building is timber framed with painted brick nogging and is clad in galvanised metal sheet at the rear. The cross-wing has been partly refaced or rebuilt in 19th-century brick, and the south-west gable end has been rebuilt in painted brick. The roof is slate, with part of it graded on the cross-wing.
The hall range consists of one or two framed bays, with a projecting gabled cross-wing to the north-east that has two framed bays. The framing features square panels, with four panels extending from the sole-plate to the wall-plate. The farmhouse is two storeys high with an attic.
On the south-east front, there is a large central rendered stack located just in front of the ridge. The hall range to the left includes a first-floor two-light wooden casement to the left, a central ground-floor two-light wooden casement, and a boarded door to the left. There is a 20th-century brick lean-to addition in front that returns to the left, featuring a two-light casement to the left, a three-light casement to the right, and a central glazed door.
The cross-wing to the right has 19th-century two-light segmental-headed attic wooden casements, two first-floor segmental-headed wooden casements (the right one from the 19th century and the left one from the 20th century), and a ground-floor 20th-century segmental-headed wooden casement to the right, along with a small 19th-century wooden segmental-headed casement to the left. There is a central segmental-headed boarded door with a glazed panel and a lean-to bracketed porch.
To the right, there is a lean-to that was a former bakehouse and likely served as a dairy. This section is made of red brick and painted coursed rubble, with a brick stack at the rear and a small leaded casement and boarded door at the front. The interior has not been inspected, but the timber-framed side wall of the cross-wing and a possible reused moulded beam are visible in the former bakehouse.
More on this building
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- Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
- No sale records on file
- Related listed building consents — 1 application
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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