End House South And End House North is a Grade II listed building in the Cambridge local planning authority area, England. Residential. 8 related planning applications.

End House South And End House North

WRENN ID
inner-casement-barley
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cambridge
Country
England
Type
Residential
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

End House South and End House North is a pair of houses that were originally designed as a single house in 1911 by M H Baillie-Scott for Dr John Forbes Cameron, who later became the Master of Gonville and Caius College. The building was converted into two houses in 1978. It is constructed of red brick and features plain tile roofs and tall plain stacks. The structure is two stories high with attics, and all windows are wooden framed casements with leaded lights and segment heads.

The east entrance front has a recessed center with an off-center doorway. To the left, there is a storey gable with a single cross casement window. The left wing has a 4-light casement window, above which is a similar 3-light window, and in the gable, there is a small 2-light casement. The right wing features a central doorway flanked by small single light windows, with a 3-light casement window above. There is a single-storey wing beyond this with a plank door and a 2-light casement.

On the west garden front, there is a projecting central gable with a 4-light window and a 3-light window above. The left wing has a canted bay with full-height cross casement windows topped with a flat leaded roof, and above it, there is a 2-light through-eaves dormer window with a flat head. The right wing contains a single 2-light casement and another canted bay window with full-height windows and a flat leaded roof, above which are two 3-light casements and a 3-light flat-headed dormer.

Inside, the house retains many original features, including a dog-leg stair with turned balusters, at least one panelled room with a 4-centred arched doorway, and various original fireplaces. These include a large inglenook in the kitchen, a stone surround with a 4-centred arch, and plain tile fireplaces on the upper floor with moulded wooden surrounds. The house also contains many original panelled doors and some moulded beams.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • No sale records on file
  • Related listed building consents — 8 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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