Manor House And Attached Wall, Stables And Coach House To North West is a Grade II listed building in the East Suffolk local planning authority area, England. First listed on 3 October 1977. House. 3 related planning applications.

Manor House And Attached Wall, Stables And Coach House To North West

WRENN ID
north-bracket-oak
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
East Suffolk
Country
England
Date first listed
3 October 1977
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

The Manor House is a mid-18th century building, with a front block added in the early 19th century. It is constructed of red brick, with black-glazed pantiles covering the front roof and red pantiles on the rear wing. The front elevation is two storeys high and dominated by a central, full-height square porch dating from circa 1820, which is a later addition. Flanking the porch are full-height canted bays added between 1905 and 1910. The central doorway has a six-panelled door with panelled reveals, set within a timber doorcase featuring engaged reeded demi-columns rising to a reeded entablature with roundels at the corners, topped with a flat hood. A plate-glass sash with margin bars, dated 1905, sits above the door. The south-west side of the porch has six-over-six sashes on both floors; the north-east side has blind windows on both floors, the upper one with painted-on glazing bars. The canted bays have plate-glass sashes with margin bars dating from 1905. The roof is gabled, with internal gable-end stacks. The rear elevation contains a 20th-century glazed half-door to the left, a 1905 sash with margin bars to the right, and a two-over-two sash on the first floor. A two-storey rear wing extends north-west. This wing has two late 18th-century six-over-six sashes on each floor to the north-east side, though one lower window is a replacement. The rear also has two late 18th-century six-over-six sashes on each floor, now with exposed boxes, one of which has been replaced. The interior of the main house was not inspected.

Attached to the manor house by a wall is an early 19th-century stable block with a coach house added around 1840. It is constructed of whole-coursed flints with brick quoins and dressings, and has a pantiled roof. The north-east side has two central plank doors, above which is a swivel window with glazing bars set under a segmental head. The stables feature a gabled roof with an internal north gable-end stack. The rear shows a line of quoins revealing the original extent of the stables when they were free-standing. There is a single small window to the right and a late 20th-century casement window under the eaves to the left. The coach house interior features a stick baluster staircase rising to the upper floor, and a plastered roof.

Detailed Attributes

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