White Horse Public House is a Grade II listed building in the Mid Suffolk local planning authority area, England. First listed on 21 July 1982. Public house. 3 related planning applications.

White Horse Public House

WRENN ID
turning-alcove-bistre
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Mid Suffolk
Country
England
Date first listed
21 July 1982
Type
Public house
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

The White Horse Public House is a public house dating from around 1600, with extensions added around 1700 and in the late 18th century, and alterations made in the 19th and 20th centuries. It features a timber frame that is plastered and has a plaintiled roof. The building has a three-cell cross entry plan with two additional bays at the parlour end and a kitchen/brewhouse at the service end. It is one storey high with an attic.

The central entrance is a 20th-century lobby in a gabled porch. To the left of the entrance, there are two three-light glazing bar casements, one of which is part opening, along with a 20th-century two-light casement at the far left. To the right, there is a part opening three-light casement and two two-light casements, both with hoodboards. The left side features a two-light gabled dormer, while the right side has a three-light gabled dormer and raking dormers. A central ridge stack is located between the hall and parlour. The left end has pentice boards and a two-light attic casement, while the right end has a lean-to outshut with a three-light attic casement. At the rear, there are dual two-over-four pane sash windows, a two-light gabled dormer, a four-light raking dormer, and a 20th-century lean-to addition.

Inside, the hall has stop-chamfered storey posts and a cross axial binding beam, with arched bracing in the end walls and collars clasping the purlins. Attached to the right is an 18th-century kitchen/brewhouse that is one storey high and has two cells, projecting forward with a gable front. It features a two-light glazing bar casement, a steeply pitched roof with low eaves, and brackets supporting the plates, along with an architraved entrance to the inner return. There is a central ridge stack, and towards the rear on the inner slope, there is an internal stack with offsets and a rebuilt cap. The right return is made of brick and has a door with weatherboarding towards the rear. At the rear, there is a weatherboarded outshut with a hipped tiled roof.

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 — 3 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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