Red Hall Farm House is a Grade II listed building in the Three Rivers local planning authority area, England. First listed on 4 October 1983. House. 2 related planning applications.

Red Hall Farm House

WRENN ID
shifting-joist-myrtle
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Three Rivers
Country
England
Date first listed
4 October 1983
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Red Hall Farm House is a house dating from the late 16th century, with extensions made twice in the 17th century, and further extensions in the 19th and early 20th centuries. The building features a timber frame with red brick nogging and some areas that are rendered. The extensions are made of stock brick and are largely covered in stucco, with tiled roofs.

Originally, the house had a three-bay lobby entry, with two additional bays added to the rear of the service end, creating an L-shaped plan. The house is two storeys high. On the ground floor, the entrance is located between the two right bays and features a plank door with a later gabled and hipped entrance porch. To the right of the entrance is a three-light flush timber casement, and in the centre is a two-light casement. The left side has another entrance and a two-light casement. The first floor displays exposed mid rails, posts, and studs, with a two-light casement on the right and a broad 16-pane sash in the centre. An original cross axial stack is located behind the entrance.

The 17th-century additions on the left return have a hall and cross wings appearance. The original left gable end features a canted bay on the ground floor and a sash window on the first floor. The first addition includes a ground floor sash and a tripartite sash on the first floor, with dentilled timber eaves and a large multiform axial ridge stack where the wing joins the front range. There is a 19th-century gabled porch where this bay meets the gable-fronted second addition, which has a ground floor sash and a first-floor tripartite sash. The original ridge stack remains intact.

At the rear, there is a two-light ground floor casement in brick and a rendered first floor. On the entrance front, to the right, there is a 19th-century bay with two-light casements, a cambered head on the ground floor, a right end stack, and a dentilled gable end with a lean-to outshut. Large early 20th-century stuccoed additions are present at the rear right and to the rear, which are slightly taller and feature sashes. The right addition has a hipped dormer and a half hipped roof, while the rear addition has an extruded stack.

Inside, the ground floor has stop-chamfered bearers, and the first floor features a 17th-century plank door and a clasped purlin roof with windbraces.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 1 transaction since 2019
  • Related listed building consents — 2 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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Nearby listed buildings

  1. Groom's Cottage at Red Hall Farm Grade II 24 m
  2. Wyatts Cottage Grade II 561 m
  3. The Lodge Grade II 646 m
  4. Redheath Grade II* 689 m
  5. The Hall House at No 2 the Stables Grade II 766 m
  6. Barn Immediately South East of Chandler's Farm House Grade II 844 m
  7. Chandlers Farmhouse Grade II 860 m
  8. Micklefield Hall Grade II 891 m
  9. Pottens Farm House Grade II 1.1 km
  10. Yew Court Lodge Grade II 1.1 km