Old Lodge Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the Rugby local planning authority area, England. First listed on 4 December 1951. Farmhouse.
Old Lodge Farmhouse
- WRENN ID
- south-beam-meadow
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Rugby
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 4 December 1951
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Old Lodge Farmhouse is a farmhouse dating from the early 17th century, with a large addition made in the late 19th century at the rear. The building is constructed from Flemish stretcher bond brick, featuring some flared headers, and has sandstone dressings. It has an old plain-tile roof and a large brick external stack at the rear. The addition is also made of brick and has a plain-tile roof with a brick ridge stack. The farmhouse has a T-plan layout, extended to an L-plan with a wing on the left side facing the farmyard. It stands two storeys high with an attic and has a symmetrical main front that faces the garden, which includes a splayed plinth, alternating quoins, and a moulded string course.
The main entrance features a 20th-century part-glazed door set within a moulded stone architrave that has a pulvinated frieze and pediment. The windows are recessed moulded stone cross windows; on the first floor, the left window is blocked while the right window has a 20th-century wooden cross window inserted. The gabled attic projections have two-light moulded mullioned windows, with the right window blocked. The first-floor and attic windows are adorned with hood moulds, and below each window is a stone-framed shaped panel filled with brickwork, with two panels below the attic windows.
To the right, there is an irregular single-storey range from the 19th and 20th centuries that is set at right angles. The left return side features a large two-storey canted bay window with recessed moulded stone mullioned and transomed windows, comprising four lights with a king mullion and two lights on the sides, all topped by a plain-tile hipped roof. All windows have 19th or 20th-century lights, with glazing bars on the upper lights. The rear of the farmhouse includes a gabled one-window range set back on the left, which has cross windows and a blocked two-light mullioned attic window. The rear also features a shallow Tudor-arched chamfered doorway with a 19th-century plank door and a cross window. The right return side of the main range, facing the farmyard, is a one-window range with cross windows, including a 20th-century wooden cross window inserted on the first floor, and a two-light mullioned attic window with glazing bars. The 19th-century wing to the right is an irregular two-storey range with four windows. Inside, the farmhouse is noted to have a four-panelled door with large strap hinges.
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