Grove Farm House is a Grade II listed building in the Broadland local planning authority area, England. First listed on 19 January 1952. A C18 Farm house. 1 related planning application.

Grove Farm House

WRENN ID
hollow-stronghold-fern
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Broadland
Country
England
Date first listed
19 January 1952
Type
Farm house
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Grove Farm House is mainly an 18th-century farm house, constructed of red brick with concrete pantiles. It is a single-pile building that has been extended with an additional two-storey section to the south, creating an asymmetrical arrangement of gables. A single-storey lean-to has been added to the west, and a single-storey wing with a hipped roof to the east. The front facade has three bays, and features a late 19th-century half-glazed door set within a porch supported by Ionic pilasters and cased columns. Above the door is a projecting entablature with a modillion cornice. A high brick plinth of narrow bricks, laid in English bond, runs along the base of the building. To the left of the door are two basement openings, one of which is blocked, both with segmental brick arches. Twentieth-century top-hung casement windows are set within the original openings, each with a flat brick arch above. The gable ends have parapets with brick tumbling and internal stacks. Flat-roofed dormers are present, featuring twentieth-century pivot windows with glazing bars. Tie irons are visible on the west side, bearing the monogram “H.B.”.

Detailed Attributes

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