Numbers 13 And 15 And Attached Walls And Outbuilding is a Grade II listed building in the West Oxfordshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 13 February 1969. House.

Numbers 13 And 15 And Attached Walls And Outbuilding

WRENN ID
small-hammer-thyme
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
West Oxfordshire
Country
England
Date first listed
13 February 1969
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Numbers 13 and 15 are two houses located on Park Street, dating from the early 19th century but with origins in the 17th century. They are constructed from coursed limestone rubble with an ashlar front and feature a gabled stone slate roof, which has concrete tiles and Welsh slates on the rear. The houses have brick end and ridge stacks and a double-depth plan.

The buildings stand three storeys high and have a three-window range. Wrought-iron scroll brackets support an early 19th-century six-pane sash window with an overlight on the right, while there is a 20th-century door on the left. The centre of the facade features two canted bay windows, both adorned with dentilled cornices; the left bay has 20th-century windows, while the right bay contains four- and six-pane sashes. Keyed flat stone arches are present above the six-pane sashes, and there are raised storey bands along with a moulded wood eaves cornice.

At the rear, there are two gabled wings and a 20th-century kitchen extension to the left. Inside, the properties feature panelled doors set in moulded architraves, an early 19th-century quarter-turn staircase with winders, and stone steps leading to a barrel-vaulted cellar, which includes a 17th-century two-light stone-mullioned window set in the wall of the rear wing.

An L-shaped wall, approximately 10 by 8 metres, is attached to the rear left and is made of limestone rubble with stone slate coping. This wall connects to a late 17th-century and 18th-century outbuilding facing Rectory Lane, which is also constructed of limestone rubble and features gabled concrete tile roofs and butt-purlin roof trusses.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 4 transactions since 1996
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  • Radon risk assessment
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Nearby listed buildings

  1. 17, Park Street Grade II 9 m
  2. 11, Park Street Grade II 17 m
  3. Chaucer's Cottage Grade II 24 m
  4. Number 9 and Attached Walls and Outbuilding Grade II 28 m
  5. Hoggrove House Grade II 30 m
  6. Treasure House Grade II 30 m
  7. 18 and 20, Park Street Grade II 31 m
  8. Chaucer's House Grade II 35 m
  9. Woodstock Lodge Grade II 39 m
  10. The Bishop's House Grade II* 41 m