Garden House North House is a Grade II listed building in the Isle of Wight local planning authority area, England. First listed on 21 July 1951. Residential.
Garden House North House
- WRENN ID
- swift-dormer-birch
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Isle of Wight
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 21 July 1951
- Type
- Residential
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Garden House and North House is a former rectory that has been converted into two houses. The original part dates from the 18th century and was extended in the 19th century when an additional parallel range was added. The building is stuccoed with incised lines to resemble masonry and features a tiled roof with brick chimneystacks. It stands two storeys high with attics.
The northwest front displays the 18th-century section, which originally had five windows with keystones, though three of these are now blocked. There are two hipped dormers with modern casements and three 20th-century casements. The front also features a moulded eaves cornice and a deep plinth, along with a central doorcase that has been built out. To the left, there is a two-storey mid-19th-century extension that includes one tripartite casement and a doorcase with a flat hood supported by brackets.
On the northeast front, there are two gables. The first floor has two 2-light 19th-century mullioned windows with hood mouldings, and on the ground floor to the right, there is a three-light canted bay with three mullioned windows. The left side features a triple mullioned window and a doorcase with an arched door and hood moulding. The southeast front shows the gable of the 18th-century house alongside an additional 19th-century gable to the right. This side has four windows, including three early 19th-century 12-pane sashes. The 19th-century gable has a 20th-century casement on the second floor, a double 12-pane sash on the first floor, and a three-light canted bay on the ground floor.
Inside, there is a late 18th-century or early 19th-century cantilevered staircase with a mahogany handrail, stick balusters, and scrolled tread ends. The first floor also features a late 18th-century six-panelled door.
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
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- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
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