Hey House is a Grade II listed building in the Newcastle-under-Lyme local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 May 1985. House. 1 related planning application.

Hey House

WRENN ID
graven-passage-summer
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Newcastle-under-Lyme
Country
England
Date first listed
14 May 1985
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Hey House is an early 18th-century house, extended in the early 19th century, with later additions and alterations. It is constructed of painted brick with plain tiled roofs, featuring coped verges and kneelers on the older section. The house is two storeys and is divided into two sections: the 18th-century part to the left and a set-back 19th-century addition to the right. Both sections have five bays and contain glazing bar sashes, with the earlier windows flush-framed. The 18th-century section displays floor bands on its left gable end and rear elevation. It has two integral end stacks and one ridge stack. The 19th-century addition has two ridge stacks and one end stack.

The ground floor of the 18th-century section includes early 19th-century French windows with two, four, and five lights respectively, from left to right, with a verandah supported by cast-iron columns extending over the two right-hand windows. A more elaborate verandah featuring Greek key ornamentation covers a six-panel door with vertical lights (which have internal shutters) at the left gable end. A two-storey mid-19th-century addition extends at right angles to the rear.

Detailed Attributes

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