Manor Farmhouse And Attahced Brewhouse Range is a Grade II listed building in the Vale of White Horse local planning authority area, England. First listed on 19 February 1988. Farmhouse. 1 related planning application.

Manor Farmhouse And Attahced Brewhouse Range

WRENN ID
brooding-frieze-frost
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Vale of White Horse
Country
England
Date first listed
19 February 1988
Type
Farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Manor Farmhouse and the attached brewhouse range is a farmhouse dating from around 1600, originally built as a two-unit range, which now forms a cross-wing to the left. An addition from around 1650 is located at the rear, and the main range was constructed around 1840. The building is made of red brick with flared headers in Flemish bond and features fragments of large timber-framing with brick infill at the end of the cross-wing to the left. The roof is complex, covered with plain tiles, and there are various brick stacks.

The farmhouse has a complex plan, originally designed as a two-unit structure with later additions. It is two stories high and has two bays, with a six-panel door to the right that is topped with a flat hood supported by brackets. The windows are arranged irregularly, featuring unhorned sash windows with glazing bars in the main range and casements in the cross-wing. Inside, there is an early 18th-century dog-leg staircase with a balustrade of turned balusters and a moulded wood handrail located at the rear of the cross-wing. There is also a 19th-century winder staircase at the junction of the main range and the cross-wing. The original range and the 1650 addition both have queen-post roofs.

The subsidiary brewhouse range, which now partly serves as utility rooms for the farmhouse, dates from around 1700, with a mid-18th-century addition to the front right, possibly incorporating an earlier structure. This range is constructed of uncoursed stone rubble with brick dressings for the main part, and grey brick with red brick dressings for the addition, all topped with an old plain-tile roof. The brewhouse has an L-shaped plan and is a single-storey-and-attic structure with two bays. The main range has 20th-century windows, while the interior features a queen-post roof in the mid-18th-century addition and a large open fireplace.

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  • Radon risk assessment
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