7-19, CHURCH GREEN is a Grade II listed building in the Braintree local planning authority area, England. First listed on 31 October 1966. Cottage. 4 related planning applications.

7-19, CHURCH GREEN

WRENN ID
keen-cobble-lichen
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Braintree
Country
England
Date first listed
31 October 1966
Type
Cottage
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

This is a range of cottages located on Church Green, Coggeshall. They were originally built in the 18th century and altered during the 19th and 20th centuries. Numbers 13 and 15 have 19th-century brick facades, while the others retain timber framing and plasterwork. The cottages are roofed with handmade red plain tiles. All face southeast and are two storeys high.

Number 7 has a stack in the left wall and a small, tiled catslide extension at the rear; its roof is approximately 0.30 metres higher than the roofs of the other cottages. It has 20th-century sash windows on each floor and a 20th-century door within a small lean-to porch, also of the 20th century and featuring one diamond pane.

Numbers 9 and 11 have been combined and are now numbered 11. They have a central stack. The ground floor features one 20th-century casement window, one sash window of 10 lights over 15 lights in an early 19th-century style, and a blocked doorway replaced with a 20th-century casement. The first floor has two similar sash windows, and a 20th-century door.

Number 13 has an axial stack at the left end and an early 19th-century sash window of 10 lights over 15 lights on each floor, with handmade glass, the lower window with a segmental arch. It has a 20th-century half-glazed door set within a semi-circular arch. Number 15 is similar to number 13 but mirrored.

Numbers 17 and 19 share an axial stack. Number 17 has one 20th-century sash window of 10 lights over 15 lights in an early 19th-century style on each floor, a 20th-century door, and a 19th-century small canopy supported on profiled brackets. The plasterwork is partly ashlared. Number 19 abuts number 21 (listed separately) and has a 20th-century casement window on the ground floor. Its first floor has an early 19th-century sash window of 10 lights over 15 lights with handmade glass, and a plain boarded door with a 19th-century small canopy on profiled brackets.

Each cottage also has a small larder light on the ground floor. At the rear of numbers 9 to 19 is a full-length, two-storey extension of red brick with a lean-to roof of slate. Number 17 has an additional single-storey lean-to extension.

More on this building

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  • Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
  • Sale history — 6 transactions since 1997
  • Related listed building consents — 4 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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Nearby listed buildings

  1. 21, Church Green Grade II 18 m
  2. Wall Forming South East Boundary of Church Green from No 6 to the Vehicle Entrance of No8 (Spinners) Grade II 29 m
  3. Sheepcotes Grade II 64 m
  4. Parish Church of St Peter Ad Vincula Grade I 109 m
  5. Wall Forming South East Boundary of Church Street, from Vehicle Entrance of No 84, Church Street, to Vehicle Entrance of No 2, Church Green Grade II 159 m
  6. The Woolpack Inn Grade II* 184 m
  7. 84, Church Street Grade II 200 m
  8. 69, 71, 73 and 75, Queen Street Grade II 220 m
  9. 75 and 77, Church Street Grade II 226 m
  10. Coggeshall House Grade II 229 m