Farm Place is a Grade II listed building in the Mole Valley local planning authority area, England. First listed on 11 November 1966. House. 1 related planning application.
Farm Place
- WRENN ID
- dim-newel-root
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Mole Valley
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 11 November 1966
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
House. Dating from the 17th century, it was restored in the 19th century and extended in the 20th century. The house is timber-framed and has brick cladding on the lower part, with tile hanging above in bands of fishscale and plain tiling. The roof is plain-tiled. It is two storeys and has attics in two gables.
The front of the house has two gabled ranges, with the one on the left set back. The left range has a single 2-light attic window, and a 4-light window below. The right range has three windows on the first floor and two on the first floor. A 3-light window is on the ground floor to the left, and a 3-light cambered-head window to the right. A 20th-century gabled porch is to the right of centre, with a timber frame on brick plinths, whitewashed rough-cast infill, diamond-pane glazing above, and a weatherboard gable. It has a planked outer door and a panelled inner door.
The return front facing Stane Street to the west has two gabled wings; the one on the right is a 20th-century reproduction. Both have coved eaves and a jettied upper stage on a moulded bressumer and brackets. There is a further jetty to the first floor. Each gable has a 3-light diamond-pane attic casement. A mullioned and transomed angle bay oriel window with scroll brackets is to the first floor, flanked by 3-light, ovolo-mullioned windows. Angle bay windows with similar mullioned flanking windows are on each of the ground floors. Fine doubled diagonal, corbelled stacks are on an offset plinth to the left gable. A 3-light diamond-pane window is in the recesses on the first, second, and ground floors between the gables.
The rear has a gabled, full-height square bay break to the left with continuous diamond-pane glazing across the first and ground floors. There is a door to the centre. 17th-century stacks are to the right end, with a hipped roof, single-storey service range set back. The interior has much exposed framing, some of which has been restored, along with some panelling and ceiling frames.
Detailed Attributes
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