Little Chesters, boundary wall and pavilion south of the house is a Grade II listed building in the Reigate and Banstead local planning authority area, England. House, pavilion. 40 related planning applications.
Little Chesters, boundary wall and pavilion south of the house
- WRENN ID
- sheer-flagstone-holly
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Reigate and Banstead
- Country
- England
- Type
- House, pavilion
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Little Chesters is a house built in 1927 by Nicholls Hughes, originally designed as two dwellings but now divided. It is constructed of brick with a tile-hung first floor, plain tile roofs, and brick stacks. The house has an irregular plan, with a left-hand wing and a projecting double-range wing to the right. It is two storeys high with an attic containing hipped tiled dormers. The windows are irregular in placement and are wood transom casements with leaded lights. The main entrance is positioned slightly right of centre, sheltered by a flat-covered hood, with a panelled door featuring strap hinges ascending a curved brick step.
The garden front presents a symmetrical five-bay facade, with projecting angled bay windows rising through two storeys at each end. A brick colonnade has been inserted between octagonal piers. A planked door is located on the right-hand end. A brick garden terrace and arbours are at the ends of the house. A boundary wall, approximately 7 feet high, extends from the left-hand wall of the house to a square pavilion with a pyramidal plain tile roof, situated 60 yards to the southwest of the house.
Detailed Attributes
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