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
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
Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.
Nearby listed buildings
- Garden Wall to Front of Turner's
- Firbank House and Hill Cottage
- Turner's Farm House
- Heathersett Littleworth Cross
- Thundry Farm House
- Crooksbury House, Fig Tree Court and West Wing
- Garden Walls, Terraces and Pergola to Rear of Crooksbury Houses
- Fulbrook House
- Clock House Crooksbury House
- Summer House, Walls and Gate Piers to Crooksbury House