Horseshoe House The Old Bull Inn is a Grade II listed building in the West Oxfordshire local planning authority area, England. Public house. 2 related planning applications.

Horseshoe House The Old Bull Inn

WRENN ID
lost-keep-summer
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
West Oxfordshire
Country
England
Type
Public house
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Horseshoe House and The Old Bull Inn is a corner public house and house, now divided into two houses. The Old Bull Inn, on the right, dates from the mid-18th century and has been altered, featuring a taller early 19th-century bay to the left. It is constructed of coursed rubble limestone with dressed quoins, a stone slate roof, and brick chimneys on the left and front right. The building has one storey and an attic with three bays. The front is irregular, with a small gable above the chimney in the blind right bay. The left bay includes a 19th-century canted bay window topped with a 20th-century hipped tiled roof. To the right of the door is a small three-pane sash window with a wooden lintel. The upper storey has flat-roofed semi-dormers with wooden casements, featuring a three-light window on the left and a two-light window in the centre. The right gable end has 20th-century three-light wooden casements. There is a stair projection at the centre rear. The 19th-century bay to the left is partly rubble stone and partly ashlar, with a blocked cellar opening, a low single light, and two storeys of two-light windows with stop-chamfered stone mullions.

Horseshoe House, on the left, dates from the late 18th to early 19th century and is built of ashlar with a stone slate roof, coped gables, and flanking brick chimneys. It has two storeys and an attic with two bays. The windows are four-pane sashes set in beaded stone surrounds with keyblocks, and there are gabled roof dormers with 20th-century two-light wooden casements. At the left end, there is a former lean-to extension that has been raised to two storeys in the 20th century, featuring an artificial slate roof and 20th-century casements. There is a rear entry.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • No sale records on file
  • Related listed building consents — 2 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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