Norrels Lodge South Lodge is a Grade II listed building in the Guildford local planning authority area, England. First listed on 25 November 1985. Lodge. 3 related planning applications.

Norrels Lodge South Lodge

WRENN ID
salt-courtyard-sage
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Guildford
Country
England
Date first listed
25 November 1985
Type
Lodge
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Norrels Lodge and South Lodge are a pair of lodges with attached gates, dating from the 1860s and built in the Lovelace style. They have been converted into houses. The lodges are constructed of flint rubble with brick quoins, and have brick extensions to the rear, all under slate roofs. They are arranged as a cross shape, facing each other, with attached gates. They are two storeys in height.

Norrels Lodge (the north lodge) bears the inscription "Salve Hospe" in brick and terracotta on its stack. It features end stacks with round terracotta pots on a quatrefoil plinth band. There is an oval band to the plinth and a band of headers-on-edge to the ground floor. A diagonal brick patterned sill band is visible on the first floor, along with machicolated brick eaves. A single metal casement window appears on the stack, and three cambered head metal framed casement windows are on the ground floor. To the sides of the single-storey porch is a single light, casement window, with a half-boarded gable. There is a part-glazed door.

South Lodge is similar to Norrels Lodge, but with a deep round arch on the rear gable, and a roll moulded surround to an oval plaque below a casement window.

Detailed Attributes

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