Green End House is a Grade II listed building in the Bedford local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 August 1983. A Post-Medieval House. 3 related planning applications.
Green End House
- WRENN ID
- sharp-keystone-torch
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Bedford
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 12 August 1983
- Type
- House
- Period
- Post-Medieval
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Green End House is a house dating to the 17th and 19th centuries, comprising a rear block and a front block that was added later. The 17th-century rear block has a timber frame covered in colour-washed rough cast, with an old clay tile roof. It originally had a two-room plan and two storeys, featuring a red brick double ridge stack, a 20th-century door, and a 20th-century casement window. Also on the ground floor is a 2-light horizontal sash and plank door, while the first floor has a 2-light horizontal sash with glazing bars and a single-light casement. A one-storey lean-to addition is visible on the north gable end. The 19th-century front block was added to create a double-pile plan, built of colour-washed brick with a hipped slate roof and three bays over two storeys. The central entrance has a front door of two fielded panels and two glazed panels, with a rectangular fanlight under a cambered head, and is sheltered by a cast iron open porch with foliate supports. There are two sashes without glazing bars either side of the door. The first floor has three smaller sashes, all with flat arches. A conservatory has been added to the south gable end.
Detailed Attributes
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