Thrupp End Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the Central Bedfordshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 6 February 1987. House. 7 related planning applications.

Thrupp End Farmhouse

WRENN ID
sombre-threshold-pearl
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Central Bedfordshire
Country
England
Date first listed
6 February 1987
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

This is a farmhouse, dating back to the 17th century and altered in the 19th century. It’s constructed from timber framing, with some sections cased in pebbledash render and others rebuilt or faced with red brick. The roof is covered in clay tiles with a half-hipped design. The house originally comprised a block facing northwest, later extended in the 19th century to form an L-shaped plan. It has two storeys and attic space, with a single-storey lean-to block within the northeast angle.

The northwest elevation has the right-hand ground floor rebuilt in brick. It features a mix of casement windows with glazing bars. A box dormer contains a two-light casement window. A partly-glazed door is positioned on the left-hand side. A red brick ridge stack, aligned with a blocked doorway, is also visible. The southwest elevation is entirely red brick and features two three-light casement windows on each floor, with the first-floor windows flanking a two-light casement. All windows have glazing bars, and the ground floor windows are set under cambered heads. A partly-glazed door is located centrally, within a 19th-century trelliswork porch. A rebuilt chimney stack is present on the rear wall. 19th-century outbuildings are attached to the right-hand gable end.

Detailed Attributes

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