Wick Grange is a Grade II listed building in the Wychavon local planning authority area, England. First listed on 22 June 1976. Grange. 1 related planning application.

Wick Grange

WRENN ID
scattered-gateway-azure
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Wychavon
Country
England
Date first listed
22 June 1976
Type
Grange
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: EPC · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

Wick Grange is a building with a timber frame wing from the 17th century, which has been encased in 18th-century red brick and features a heightened tiled roof. It stands two storeys high and has three windows, including two and three-light casements. The central entrance consists of a panelled and glazed door flanked by 19th-century pilasters and an entablature. To the left, there is a late 19th-century stone and brick splayed bay window. The building has a central chimney, and the timber framing and roof trusses are exposed on the interior.

On the north side, there is a 19th-century brick gabled cross-wing. The south end features a large wing built around 1850 by Whitfield Dawkes in a Tudor-Gothic style, constructed of red brick with ashlar dressings. This wing has a tiled roof with moulded stone coping on the gable ends and an embattled parapet. It is two storeys tall with five bays, and the centre bay projects and is gabled. The sash windows lack glazing bars and are set in chamfered architraves with dripmoulds.

The central projecting entrance bay has diagonal corner buttresses on the ground floor, leading to a large moulded four-centre arch doorway with a dripmould and quatrefoils in the spandrels. The entrance features panelled and glazed double doors with gothic traceried lights. Above the central bay is a gable with an arched recessed panel that contains a shield. All gables are topped with stone finals. The building has stone and brick chimney stacks with diagonally set brick shafts and stone cornices, as well as a moulded stone string course and cornice. To the east, there is a screen wall in front of the stable yard, made of red brick with battlements and moulded stone coping, which steps over a four-centre arch carriageway.

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  • Radon risk assessment
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