East End Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the King0s Lynn and West Norfolk local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 June 1953. Farmhouse. 2 related planning applications.

East End Farmhouse

WRENN ID
fallow-pier-smoke
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
King0s Lynn and West Norfolk
Country
England
Date first listed
5 June 1953
Type
Farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

East End Farmhouse is a farmhouse dating from around 1600 with later 17th-century developments. It is constructed from flint, carstone, and clunch with brick dressings and red pantiled roofs, representing several phases of building across the 17th century.

The main part of the farmhouse is two storeys high, with a two-storey porch projecting from the west. The porch is flint with brick dressings, including a central four-centred arch with plastered reveals and a brick drip mould. It has brick quoins and a stepped brick coped gable with a cut-down finial. A two-light casement window is on the first floor.

To the south is a two-storey central range with a chequered facade of carstone, flint, and pink clunch. This section has three inserted 18th-century ground floor window surrounds, one of which is blocked, with surviving wooden casement cross windows. The first floor has two two-light casements with single glazing bars in rectangular 17th-century brick surrounds. A brick plat-band is present on the first floor, and battered brick quoins are visible on the south side, both dating to the 18th century. Brick coped parapets mark the divisions between the different builds to the north and south.

A single bay range to the south, possibly of the same build as the porch, is galleted with knapped flint and features a brick plinth and quoins. The ground floor has a three-light casement window set within narrowed surrounds of two former 18th-century sash windows, with quoins and flat brick arches remaining. The first floor has two two-light casements in rectangular brick openings. The south gable has kneelers, brick copings, and a blocked brick-dressed 17th-century attic window. A carstone and pantiled lean-to addition is on the ground floor.

The north single bay range is carstone and features single ground and first floor two-light casements. A boarded door is positioned at the north side, and the north gable has a parapet. Each of the three ranges has a steeply pitched roof with parapets and two stacks. A rear outshut stairs connect the centre and south ranges, and a lean-to extends from the north gable with another outshut to the rear.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • No sale records on file
  • Related listed building consents — 2 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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