Two Piers Of Cottages Coach House And Adjacent Range To West, Immediately North West Of Mannington Hall is a Grade II listed building in the North Norfolk local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 July 1991. A N/A Cottages, coach house, stables.

Two Piers Of Cottages Coach House And Adjacent Range To West, Immediately North West Of Mannington Hall

WRENN ID
young-keystone-wren
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North Norfolk
Country
England
Date first listed
12 July 1991
Type
Cottages, coach house, stables
Period
N/A
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

This listing describes two pairs of cottages, a coach house, and an adjacent range of stables located immediately northwest of Mannington Hall. The buildings date from the early to mid-19th century, with remodelling or rebuilding of earlier structures that were shown on an estate map from 1565. The cottages are constructed from flint cobbles with stone and brick dressings, while the rear cottages are made of brick. The coach house has a weatherboarded front, and the stables are a mix of flint and brick. The roofs are covered with red clay pantiles, featuring gabled and hipped ends, although the stables have been reclad in asbestos sheets.

The buildings are arranged in a long range, with the eastern end housing a pair of cottages that include an integral coach house. A second coach house was added to the right in the late 19th century, along with another pair of cottages at the rear. To the west, there is a long single-storey stable range. The cottages are two storeys high and feature a three-window layout, with the integral coach house displaying two large 19th-century three-light mullion-transom casements on the ground floor and smaller two and three-light casements on the first floor. Ground floor openings include a central plank door, a vertical panel door on the left, and double doors for the coach house on the right, all topped with segmental brick arches.

The coach house on the right has a weatherboarded front with double doors and a three-light window. The single-storey stables on the left have three casements, each with three arched lights, along with a plank door on the right and a 20th-century glazed door and double doors on the left. At the rear, there is a random brick and flint wall, and the lower courses of brick at the back of the left cottages may incorporate materials from the earlier range on this site. The pair of brick cottages on the left back onto the front cottages and are two storeys high, with a symmetrical two-window range of 19th-century three-light casements. The interiors have not been inspected.

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Nearby listed buildings

  1. Walls to Garden and Moat, Bridge and Attached Gazebo and Arch at Mannington Hall Grade II 54 m
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  3. Mannington Hall Grade I 82 m
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  5. Barn at Hall Farm, Mannington Grade II 365 m
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