The Old Granary is a Grade II listed building in the Waverley local planning authority area, England. First listed on 23 February 1970. House.

The Old Granary

WRENN ID
north-turret-poplar
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Waverley
Country
England
Date first listed
23 February 1970
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

The Old Granary is a building that likely dates back to the early 17th century, with a later 17th-century wing and subsequent alterations, particularly in the 20th century. It features a mix of timber framing with painted brick infill, painted brick and rubblestone, and some tile-hanging. The building has plain tile roofs and is one storey with an attic.

No 16 consists of two bays, while No 14, which is aligned to the right, has a gable end and measures one by two bays. There is a rear wing that corresponds to No 18. Throughout the building, there are 20th-century small-pane, wood-framed casement windows. No 16 includes a glazed door with a side-light, a two-light window, and a segmental brick-arched passageway at the ground floor. It also features two three-light, hipped gableted dormers with a stack positioned between them, located forward of the ridge, and one at the right end.

No 14 has a rubblestone ground floor with two two-light windows, and the first floor is timber-framed with tension braces and two cross-windows, topped by a tile pentice that rises into a tile-hung gable. The right return has a similar rubblestone ground floor with a 20th-century door on the right and a square-panelled timber frame above, with a tension brace on the left. The rear of No 16 shows remnants of timber framing, including a wall-post on the left and a mid-rail with mortices in the soffit from a former wall.

Projecting on the right is No 18, which has square-panelled timber framing on the first floor, a part-glazed door, and a window below a three-light hipped dormer, along with 20th-century additions to the rear. The interiors of Nos 14 and 16 were not inspected, but No 18 has various exposed timbers.

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  • Radon risk assessment
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