Clements And Jasmine House is a Grade II listed building in the West Oxfordshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 15 May 1989. House. 6 related planning applications.

Clements And Jasmine House

WRENN ID
half-loggia-hyssop
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
West Oxfordshire
Country
England
Date first listed
15 May 1989
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Clements and Jasmine House are a pair of attached houses located on The Green in Kingham. Clements House dates to 1825, with later additions and alterations. It is constructed from roughly coursed limestone rubble with a slate roof, the rear portion having concrete tiles. The house has two storeys and an attic. It features 19th-century three-light, segmental-headed metal casement windows on both floors, to the left and right of a 20th-century gabled timber porch with a boarded outer door and a half-glazed inner door. Two gabled dormers are positioned directly above the casement windows at the lower part of the roof slope. A datestone inscribed "1825" is centrally located on the first floor. Integral end stacks are present, with a red brick shaft on the left (rebuilt in the 20th century) and a shared stack with Jasmine House to the right. A 20th-century two-storey addition to the rear on the left is not considered to be of special architectural interest.

Jasmine House likely dates to the 18th century, with the eaves raised in the mid-19th century, and it has also undergone later additions and alterations. The original section is built from roughly coursed marlstone rubble, while the part where the eaves were raised is roughly coursed limestone, with a slate roof. It features two storeys and an attic, with a gable window illuminating the original house’s attic. The front has a two-window arrangement, featuring segmental-headed glazing bar sashes with 16 panes to the ground floor, above which are gabled half-dormers. Integral end stacks with red brick shafts are present, the left one shared with Clements House. The outline of the original roof pitch is visible on the right gable end. A long range at a right angle to the rear on the left is one storey and has an attic with three 19th-century gabled half-dormers. A boarded door is situated on the far left, alongside two late 20th-century casements in a 19th-century style, with wooden lintels, and a half-glazed door to the right. Four 19th-century segmental-headed casements are located to the right, three to the left, and one to the right of a segmental-headed boarded door. Two red brick ridge stacks are situated to the right of the centre.

Detailed Attributes

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