1,2 And 3, Church View is a Grade II listed building in the West Oxfordshire local planning authority area, England. Dwelling. 13 related planning applications.
1,2 And 3, Church View
- WRENN ID
- sunken-cellar-scarlet
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- West Oxfordshire
- Country
- England
- Type
- Dwelling
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Nos. 1, 2 and 3, Church View comprise three dwellings, originally one house, dating to the 17th century, with later additions from the early to mid-18th century and a smaller 18th or 19th-century extension to the right. The building is constructed of coursed rubble limestone, with a stone slate roof and stone chimneys with brick shafts to the left and between the right bays. It follows a lobby-entry plan, with an early 18th-century staircase wing to the rear. The main front is two storeys high and has three bays. The centre bay and upper storey of the left bay feature hollow-chamfered stone mullion windows with Tudor hoodmoulds, the lower window having four lights and the upper windows each having three. The upper central window has a 20th-century coating and retains old leaded glazing. There is a 20th-century two-light barred wooden casement to the ground floor left, and 20th-century three-light wooden casements to the right bay, all with wooden lintels. Contemporary board doors separate the bays, each with a wooden lintel. To the right is a single-storey extension, likely formerly part of a bakehouse, dating from the late 18th or 19th century, containing a 20th-century door to a passage and a four-pane sash window. A rear wing, dating to the 18th century and containing one storey and an attic, has a 20th-century concrete slate roof. The interior includes deeply chamfered spine beams with run-out stops, 17th-century plaster rosettes in the ceilings of the left bays, a winder stair on the axis of a chimney stack and lobby entry, and a rear staircase wing with 20th-century stairs and the original pigeon loft containing six nesting boxes. The roof is supported by heavy trusses with high collars and double butt purlins.
Detailed Attributes
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