Hastoe Cross Cottage With Adjoining Brewhouse And Granary is a Grade II listed building in the Dacorum local planning authority area, England. First listed on 29 May 1986. House, brewhouse, granary.

Hastoe Cross Cottage With Adjoining Brewhouse And Granary

WRENN ID
burning-granite-cobweb
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Dacorum
Country
England
Date first listed
29 May 1986
Type
House, brewhouse, granary
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Hastoe Cross Cottage, along with its adjoining brewhouse and granary, is a historic building that dates back to the 17th century or earlier for the house, with the granary from the 18th century and the brewhouse from the 19th century. The house has been refronted and features a rear extension added around 1984.

The granary is timber framed, square in shape, with dark weatherboarding and a pyramid-shaped roof made of old red tiles. It is raised on red brick walls on the east, south, and west sides, with the lower part open. The brewhouse is a single-storey structure made of plum brick and has a red tiled roof, with a chimney at the south end that connects it to the granary and house.

The house itself is timber framed with a plastered plinth and infill panels on the exposed frame at the east end and the upper part of the rear wall. The front wall is stuccoed, and the eaves have been heightened. It has a steep old red tile roof that extends over a rear outshut on the west half, with a rendered matching rear wing. The house has a long 1.5-storey, three-unit plan that faces south, with the front elevated to two storeys. The service end is at the west, and the entrance is located one-third from the east end. Each unit has separate chimneys, with internal chimneys on the east side of the west and middle sections, and a rear lateral chimney on the east part.

The entrance features a six-panel door with a small sash window above, which has three panes over three panes. On each side, there are sash windows with four panes over eight panes. The west part of the house has three-light 18th-century leaded casement windows in the west gable and on the ground floor at the front. The east gable displays timber framing with a clasped-purlin roof and a collar-and-tie-beam truss. The rear includes a three-light leaded window in a gabled dormer and a 17th or 18th-century three-light leaded casement window in the east room, featuring a chamfered axial beam.

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