Flint Lodge And Attached Conservatory And Wall is a Grade II listed building in the Portsmouth local planning authority area, England. Villa. 4 related planning applications.

Flint Lodge And Attached Conservatory And Wall

WRENN ID
narrow-jade-weasel
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Portsmouth
Country
England
Type
Villa
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Flint Lodge is a villa dating to 1853, designed by T.E. Owen. It is constructed of flint with stone dressings, and has a steep-pitched Welsh slate roof with a brick stack on the left and a rendered stack on the right rear pitch. The villa is asymmetrical and in a Gothicised style.

The exterior is two storeys and an attic, with three bays, the right bay being blind. Rusticated stone quoin strips are present. A central four-stone-step approach leads to a one-storey projecting porch with a chamfered stone surround and a pointed arch. The recessed boarded door is set within a similar surround, with a pointed fanlight above. A small two-light casement is situated above the porch in a rusticated stone surround. A facing gable features cut bargeboards. To the left, within the projecting bay, is another facing gable with elaborate cut bargeboards. This contains a tripartite timber mullion and transomed three-light casement with chamfered stone surrounds and a label dripstone. Similar casements and surrounds are present on the first and second floors, although the second floor lacks a dripstone. To the right, a blind wall has a stone panel with a shield surrounded by pointed tracery, bearing the date 1851. A small two-storey recessed coach house is located on the left, with a facing gable and cut bargeboards. The ground floor has double doors with a casement in a rusticated surround above. On the right return, a projecting bay to the left and a recessed bay to the right each have facing gables and elaborate cut bargeboards. A tripartite canted bay with a timber transom and mullioned casements, covered by a tented slate roof, is on the left. The right side features two-light timber transom and mullioned casements. On the first floor and in the attic to the left bay are two-light casements in rusticated chamfered stone surrounds.

Internally, ornate marble fireplaces, a staircase, and moulded plasterwork remain intact, with the exception of two ceiling roses.

A conservatory is attached to the right, featuring a flint and brick base wall. A wall also connects to the property.

More on this building

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  • Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
  • Sale history — 3 transactions since 2014
  • Related listed building consents — 4 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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