The Priory is a Grade II listed building in the Mid Suffolk local planning authority area, England. First listed on 29 July 1955. House. 4 related planning applications.

The Priory

WRENN ID
still-nave-yarrow
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Mid Suffolk
Country
England
Date first listed
29 July 1955
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

The Priory is a house dated 1844, as inscribed on the rear, likely built for William Rogers, gardener at the now-demolished Redgrave Hall. It is constructed of clay lump and plaster, with a shallow hipped slate roof. The main block is three bays wide. The central entrance features a six-panelled door with a rectangular fanlight, a panelled reveal, and a doorcase with semi-round reeded mouldings, lozenges at the angles, and a cornice. There are recessed glazing bar sashes to the front. Projecting pilaster strips articulate each bay and are linked by an eaves band. The house has a plinth and boxed eaves. Two axial ridge stacks flank the centre bay. Short twentieth-century spur walls are at each end. The rear of the house includes a half-glazed door to the left, and to the rear, two and three-light glazing bar casements and French windows beneath the eaves. Extending to the rear right is a single-storey outbuilding with a door and two-light casements. Inside, a dogleg staircase has slat balusters, a ramped, moulded, and wreathed handrail, turned newel posts, cheek pieces, original architraved panelled doors, and cornices.

Detailed Attributes

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