14 AND 15, THE GREEN (See details for further address information) is a Grade II listed building in the Mole Valley local planning authority area, England. House.
14 AND 15, THE GREEN (See details for further address information)
- WRENN ID
- late-rampart-pigeon
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Mole Valley
- Country
- England
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Nos. 14 and 15 on The Green is a house that has been divided, originally built in the 17th century and later remodelled and extended in the late 19th century. The rear right-hand side features a timber frame with exposed framing and raised eaves, while the front displays an applied decorative frame with red and blue brick infill, which was once colourwashed, set on a brick plinth. The left-hand return front of the right wing is tile hung from the 19th century and has a galleted sandstone block stack. The roofs are plain tiled. The building has a T-shaped plan with a gabled end cross wing to the right and stands two storeys high, featuring a 17th-century offset brick and stone stack on the left end, which has been rebuilt in a ribbed and diagonal brick dentilled design. There is a 19th-century corbelled diagonal stack to the right.
To the left, there is one storey and an attic under two gabled diamond-pane dormers that extend through the eaves, with tile hung gables and arrowhead patterned bargeboards, topped with pendant finials. An eaves board with four scroll brackets supports three arches to the framing, with the outer arches featuring tension bracing and diagonal brick cut-outs that follow the line of the braces. On the ground floor, there are two 6-light mullioned and transomed windows beneath patterned tile pentice hoods supported by braces, along with two panels shaped like St. Andrew's Cross below. The central door is located under a steeply pitched gabled hood with ridge cresting and a spiked pendant finial, and the bargeboards are decorated with roundels.
The right wing includes a first-floor oriel window supported by thick scroll brackets, with a patterned tiled hipped roof above. There is also a mullioned and transomed leaded window, and a central half-glazed door below, flanked by two-light leaded windows on either side, all beneath a central gabled hood with pentice hoods over the windows.
More on this building
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