64, Hutton Village is a Grade II listed building in the Brentwood local planning authority area, England. First listed on 20 February 1976. House. 1 related planning application.

64, Hutton Village

WRENN ID
twelfth-gallery-honey
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Brentwood
Country
England
Date first listed
20 February 1976
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

64 Hutton Village is a house that dates from the late 18th century to early 19th century, with some 20th-century alterations. Originally, it was two adjoining houses that shared a central 18th-century stack. A 20th-century cross-wing has been added to the south end, constructed from rendered brick and blockwork, and topped with a clay-tiled roof, giving the building a T-shaped plan.

The exterior features a west-facing front with three windows. The two northern windows belong to the original house and are located on the ground and first floors, framed with 18th-century moulded architraves and fitted with sash windows that have glazing bars and 4x4 panes. There is also a 20th-century flat-roofed bay window on the ground floor with two casements, each containing 2x4 panes. The gabled front of the 20th-century cross-wing has a ground floor door with a simple hood, four fielded panels, and upper glazing with glazing bars and 3x3 panes. The first floor has a window with glazing bars and 4x4 panes.

On the east-facing rear, there are two main sections similar to the west elevation, with roofs covered in 20th-century clay tiles. The early 19th-century range to the north has a ground floor made of red brick and a first floor that is weatherboarded. A 20th-century lean-to porch in red brick includes a 4x3 paned casement window at the north end. The principal windows on both the ground and first floors have 19th-century bead-moulded frames but now feature 20th-century 2-light casements with glazing bars, each with 4x3 panes. Additionally, there are two smaller fixed windows on the ground floor with 2x2 panes. The cross-wing has a ground floor 4-light casement window with 8x5 panes and a first-floor 2-light window with 4x4 panes.

The north end elevation reveals the original house's shape, showcasing two parallel gabled roofs, with the rear one slightly smaller than the front, likely indicating rebuilding and raising to two storeys in the 19th century over an existing 18th-century rear out-shut of similar depth. The south end elevation of the 20th-century cross-wing features two ground floor casement windows, one single light and the other a two-light window.

Inside, the house has been significantly rebuilt, but some principal framing members remain exposed. Number 64 is part of a group of buildings in Hutton Village.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 1 transaction since 1997
  • Related listed building consents — 1 application
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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