3, Fullbridge is a Grade II listed building in the Maldon local planning authority area, England. Public house, offices.

3, Fullbridge

WRENN ID
final-niche-thunder
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Maldon
Country
England
Type
Public house, offices
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

No. 3 Fullbridge is a public house that has been converted into offices. It dates from the 18th century and early 19th century. The building is timber-framed, featuring a front made of grey brick headers with red brick dressings, while the sides are constructed of red brick. The roofs are hipped gambrel in form and the building has an L-plan layout.

The exterior consists of two storeys with attics and a three-window range. There are three hipped dormers with moulded eaves and two-light small-paned casements. On the first floor, small-paned tripartite sash windows sit under rubbed brick flat arches. The ground floor features a central early 19th-century doorcase with a flat boldly moulded cornice or hood, plain Tuscan pilasters, and a door with four raised-and-fielded panels, which has been altered below. There is also one tripartite sash window similar to those above, but with a central vertical glazing bar. The long 19th-century public-house front has seven pilasters, matching the adjoining doorcase, along with a fascia and moulded cornice. It includes three entrance doors with fanlights and moulded square panels, as well as two two-light fixed windows, with the wall area clad in red glazed tiles.

At the north-east end, there is a plain tile-roofed lean-to that has a concave-curved parapet facing the street. The rear elevation is finished with 20th-century pargeted render and features a projecting stair tower leading to the attics, topped with a hipped plain tile roof. The rear wing includes two sash windows on each floor, and the rear face of the main block has similar windows. The south-west face of the rear wing has a hipped dormer with a six-pane sash window. The stair tower contains one 16-pane sash window at the attic landing and a six-pane sash window in a moulded surround at the first-floor landing. There are stacks on each flank.

Inside, the upper flights of the stair tower are adorned with a Chinese-Chippendale handrail. The south-west ground-floor room of the front block features an 18th-century fireplace with a pulvinated frieze and shouldered surround set in panelling.

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