Fyfe Lodge And Fyfe Cottage is a Grade II listed building in the Stratford-on-Avon local planning authority area, England. First listed on 2 August 1972. House. 3 related planning applications.

Fyfe Lodge And Fyfe Cottage

WRENN ID
tangled-gargoyle-wren
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Stratford-on-Avon
Country
England
Date first listed
2 August 1972
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Fyfe Lodge and Fyfe Cottage are a house, now divided into two separate dwellings, dating to the 18th century with later alterations and additions constructed between 1901 and 1912. The buildings are of an irregular plan with a main body and cross-wing, accompanied by rear wings. The exterior is built of coursed dressed lias limestone, with some stucco and brickwork, and has a gabled roof covered in old tiles, featuring a brick end stack and a cross-axial stack.

The building has two storeys and a seven-window front. The right end of the cross-wing has a hipped roof, while the left side features a mostly stuccoed gabled projection, and a lean-to outshut. A top dentil brick cornice runs along the top. The main entrance is positioned to the right of the centre and incorporates an overlight above a plank door. The outshut houses three windows; one is a small-paned casement, and the other two are modern casements. A gabled projection contains a window with a sill and a two-over-two pane sash window and a further window with a sill and a three-over-six pane sash window. The first floor has a window with a sill and modern glazing to the gabled projection and two windows with timber lintels over modern casements to the left. A window to the right features a sill and a three-over-six pane sash window with a timber lintel.

The stuccoed right return has an elliptical-headed entrance with a fanlight containing radial glazing bars over a six-flush-panel door. The left return has a brick gable and an entrance with a plank door and overlight, alongside a two-light small-paned casement to the outshut. A rear wing projects and features small windows to the front and return. Brick jambs are visible at a blocked entrance and sections of brickwork to an end addition, which has an exposed truss at the end.

The rear of the property exhibits a cross-wing extended to the right by a gabled range with a cross-axial stack and an end stack, with four-over-eight pane sash windows. The front range mainly has modern top-hung casements. The interior of the building has not been inspected.

Detailed Attributes

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