The Cottage, The Coach House And Attached Stables Approximately 40 Metres North East Of Woodstock House And Attached Wall And Gatepier is a Grade II listed building in the West Oxfordshire local planning authority area, England. Brewhouse, coachhouse, stables, flats.

The Cottage, The Coach House And Attached Stables Approximately 40 Metres North East Of Woodstock House And Attached Wall And Gatepier

WRENN ID
open-facade-jet
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
West Oxfordshire
Country
England
Type
Brewhouse, coachhouse, stables, flats
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

The Cottage, the Coach House, and attached stables, located approximately 40 meters northeast of Woodstock House, date from the early 19th century. This building complex includes a brewhouse and coach house that have been converted into flats. The structure is made of coursed limestone rubble with an ashlar front and features a gabled former tile roof with 20th-century brick end stacks. It has a three-unit plan and stands two storeys high with a symmetrical three-window range.

A keyed semi-circular arch is present over a 20th-century door with a fanlight, while similar arches are found over 20th-century double doors with vertical glazing bars leading to a fanlight, and an 8-pane sash window with radial bars to the left. The first floor has flat stone arches over horned 8-pane sashes. There are raised storey bands and a moulded cornice beneath the parapet.

To the right is the former coach house, now also flats, which is built with similar materials and consists of one storey and an attic, featuring a four-window range. It has semi-circular arches over two double doors to the left and 20th-century windows, along with a timber lintel over a 20th-century door to the right and 20th-century gabled half-dormers. The interiors have not been inspected.

Additional features include an early 19th-century stable range to the right, constructed of limestone rubble with a hipped stone slate roof. This one-storey, 11-bay range has a central three-bay projection, semi-circular arches over stable doors, and centre-hung casements set in revealed panels. There is also a tall stone-coped limestone rubble wall, approximately 7 meters long, attached to an early 19th-century gatepier with a moulded entablature and capping to the left.

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