Hazel Stub Farm is a Grade II listed building in the West Suffolk local planning authority area, England. First listed on 19 November 1993. Farmhouse.

Hazel Stub Farm

WRENN ID
nether-ember-soot
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
West Suffolk
Country
England
Date first listed
19 November 1993
Type
Farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Hazel Stub Farm is a hall house that dates back to around 1500, with extensions from the early 17th century, late 17th century, and 19th century, along with re-roofing and remodelling in the late 18th century and restoration in the 20th century. The building has an L-shaped plan, featuring a 5-bay hall house with a 2-bay early 17th-century extension facing the road, and a 2-bay later 17th-century extension that returns at a right angle to the first extension. A 19th-century extension has been added in line with the later extension. The structure is timber-framed and encased in 18th-century brick, rendered and colourwashed, with plain tile roofs and brick stacks; one stack was inserted in the hall range in the mid-16th century, while gable end stacks serve the 17th and 19th-century extensions.

The exterior is two storeys high, with the entrance located at the rear of the hall range, featuring a glazed 20th-century door. The ground floor has two 2-light and one 1-light metal lattice casement windows. The first floor retains two 17th-century diamond mullioned windows, one with 5 lights and the other with 4 lights, along with an additional fixed window to the right. The right gable end jetties on the first floor, exposing timber framing, and has a 17th-century diamond mullioned window with 5 lights on each floor, plus an inserted window in the attic. The front of the hall range has four windows; to the right, there are horned sash windows (2/2) on each floor, while the rest are irregularly placed metal casements. The later extensions that run parallel to the road feature a door in the gable end, 8/8 unhorned sash windows, and inserted 20th-century casements.

Inside, good quality framing is exposed in the original hall house. The roofs over both the hall house and the extension are of clasped purlin construction and include some reused timbers.

More on this building

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  • Radon risk assessment
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