Turner'S is a Grade II listed building in the Waverley local planning authority area, England. First listed on 2 January 1986. House. 1 related planning application.

Turner'S

WRENN ID
pitched-oriel-juniper
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Waverley
Country
England
Date first listed
2 January 1986
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Turner’s is a house, likely dating to around 1870, and now divided into separate dwellings. It is constructed of ironstone rubble with buff-coloured brick dressings and quoins, and has Welsh slate roofs, with some slates laid in scalloped bands, topped with "fleur-de-lys" ridge cresting. The building has a complex design with gables on all sides, and features large, Tudor-style stoneware terracotta chimney stacks, some octagonal and round, with moulded decoration on plinths. A wooden lantern sits at the centre under a turret roof, topped with a scrolled weathervane, and trefoil openings are present on each face.

The house is largely two storeys, built into a hillside, with attics on the south and east fronts which face the lane. The south-west front has a large gable at the centre, with decorative pierced, wavy-edged bargeboards. The roofline of this gable is set back, and it contains a triangular-headed attic window in a quoined brick surround, featuring lozenge-shaped cast-iron tracery. A cambered-head attic window is located to the left gable, and three cambered-head first-floor windows are positioned at the centre and to the right, all with matching glazing. A projecting, shallow ten-light angle bay extends across the ground floor centre and is covered by a slate roof. A two-storey, 20th-century square bay is situated to the left.

The north-west front (facing terraces) has a large central gable with a cast-iron casement window under a triangular head. A plat band runs over the ground floor to the right. There are two glazing bar sashes below. Glazed casement doors are set in a re-entrant angle, with a flat porch hood above. The south-east front consists of three gables, the central one projecting, and the largest to the right. A triangular-headed attic window with lozenge-shaped glazing is set within the centre gable. A hip-roofed bay rises through two floors beneath, containing a five-light first-floor window and a six-light ground-floor window, both with cambered heads in brick surrounds and patterned glazing bars. A similar two-light first-floor casement is located to the left. Two second-floor, cambered-head casements with decorative glazing bars are found on the right-hand gable, alongside a seven-light first-floor casement. Two hip-roofed angle bay windows are present on the ground floor. A door is set back within a re-entrant angle to the left. 20th-century extensions have been added to the rear of the building.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 2 transactions since 2006
  • Related listed building consents — 1 application
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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Nearby listed buildings

  1. Garden Wall to Front of Turner's Grade II 13 m
  2. Firbank House and Hill Cottage Grade II 136 m
  3. Turner's Farm House Grade II 830 m
  4. Heathersett Littleworth Cross Grade II 1.1 km
  5. Thundry Farm House Grade II 1.2 km
  6. Crooksbury House, Fig Tree Court and West Wing Grade II 1.3 km
  7. Garden Walls, Terraces and Pergola to Rear of Crooksbury Houses Grade II 1.3 km
  8. Fulbrook House Grade II 1.3 km
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