Frimley Park Mansion is a Grade II listed building in the Surrey Heath local planning authority area, England. First listed on 19 July 1984. A 1760 Country house. 1 related planning application.

Frimley Park Mansion

WRENN ID
spare-gallery-vetch
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Surrey Heath
Country
England
Date first listed
19 July 1984
Type
Country house
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Frimley Park Mansion is a country house that now serves as an Army Cadet training centre. It was built in 1760 for Sir Henry Tichbourne and has 20th-century extensions added to the street front on the west side. The mansion features whitewashed stucco and hipped slate roofs. It stands two storeys tall with attics, which are highlighted by four flat roof dormers on the entrance front. The right-hand return front, which was the original entrance front from 1760, is three storeys high.

The entrance front is regular in design, with a four-bay recessed centre and angle bays that rise through two storeys to the ends, showcasing channeled rustication at the corners. The windows are glazing bar sash throughout, and the angle bays have doubled casement doors. There are wrought iron balconies across the first floor. To the right of centre, there are doubled panelled doors beneath a pedimented Doric porch. The left end has two bays set back with blocked windows.

The right-hand return front features a former entrance with a seven-bay layout, where the central three bays are part of a shallow pedimented block. This side also has glazing bar sash windows, including a central first-floor Venetian-style window set in an arched recessed panel, with a central blind arch above in the pediment that encloses a swag. A flat hood Doric frontispiece is present at the centre of the ground floor.

Inside, there are reputedly some 18th-century fragments remaining, along with a late 17th-century staircase from a previous house and Jacobean panelling. The interior has not been inspected. It is noted that Latrobe is known to have worked at the house around 1780.

More on this building

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  • Radon risk assessment
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Nearby listed buildings

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  6. South Lodge Grade II 1.4 km
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  8. 2 and 4, Chapel Lane Grade II 1.5 km
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