Manor House And Attached Wall is a Grade II* listed building in the New Forest local planning authority area, England. A C17 Farmhouse. 3 related planning applications.

Manor House And Attached Wall

WRENN ID
late-paling-onyx
Grade
II*
Local Planning Authority
New Forest
Country
England
Type
Farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

The Manor House and attached wall is a large farmhouse that originally served as a manor house. It dates back to the early 17th century, with remains of a larger house, and has been altered in the 18th century and restored in the 20th century. The building is constructed of rubble flint and stone, rendered with stone dressings, or brick and flint with brick dressings, and features a plain tile roof with similar wall coping.

The structure is L-shaped, comprising a four-bay, two-and-a-half-storey block that faces the road, and a two-storey, two-bay wing that extends along the road. This wing continues as a wall with service buildings against it, culminating in a gateway. The road front displays a restored 17th-century stone mullioned two-light window on the left gable of the main block, above which is a 17th-century three-light window, and a 20th-century timber three-light mullioned window in the gable. The raised gable wall has been restored and features a four-gable finial.

To the right in the wing, there are 20th-century leaded timber mullioned windows; a small five-light window in the first bay and a larger one with a transom in the other bay. There is a lean-to at the end that marks the start of the wall, followed by a brick section with a door, and then a rendered wall leading to a four-bay hip-roofed building behind, with a length of wall leading to a 20th-century gateway. The left front has a three-light stone mullioned window with a hood mould. The gable wall at the far end is similar, with a butt of stone, brick, and flint chequerwork; the other side features brick and flint with an external brick stack.

Inside the main block, there is a 17th-century dogleg staircase, some panelling, and stone fireplaces.

More on this building

Sign in or create a free account to unlock:

  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 1 transaction since 2018
  • Related listed building consents — 3 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
Create free account

Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.

Nearby listed buildings

  1. Read's Farmhouse Grade II 50 m
  2. Dennetts Farmhouse Grade II 73 m
  3. Garretts Grade II 86 m
  4. Downlands Cottage Grade II 113 m
  5. Lime Trees Grade II 120 m
  6. High Bank Grade II 129 m
  7. Williams Farm House Grade II 144 m
  8. Wall Along Road South of Lime Trees Grade II 145 m
  9. Granary Immediately East of Williams Farm House Grade II 157 m
  10. Pilgrim's Cottage Grade II 194 m