Nightingale Lodge is a Grade II listed building in the Waverley local planning authority area, England. First listed on 1 February 1991. House. 7 related planning applications.
Nightingale Lodge
- WRENN ID
- first-cornice-ebony
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Waverley
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 1 February 1991
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Nightingale Lodge is a house dating from the mid-19th century, likely built for J Moon. The house is constructed of red brick in Flemish bond with painted stone dressings, and has a plain tile roof. It is symmetrical in design and has two storeys and three bays. Features include a chamfered plinth, rusticated quoins, an eaves band, a plain cornice and a coped parapet with hipped capstones to the end piers. The central entrance is a six-panel door with a three-pane overlight, set within a Tuscan portico that has a deep entablature and blocking course. The ground-floor windows are sash windows with glazing bars, architraves, friezes and console-bracketed cornices. First-floor windows are sash windows with glazing bars, with raised plain surrounds rising into the eaves band. The roof is hipped, and there are two stacks to each side, originally corniced, and now rendered or hung with Welsh slate. At the rear, there are segmental-arched windows; the first-floor windows retain their original form, and stepped dentilled eaves are present. The rear also features paired, hipped gables. Inside, there are panelled doors and reveals. A straight-flight, open-string stair has stick balusters, a columnar newel, and panelling below. The design of the house is similar to that of No. 24.
Detailed Attributes
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