Tredarrup is a Grade II listed building in the Cornwall local planning authority area, England. First listed on 13 January 1988. A 17th century House. 3 related planning applications.

Tredarrup

WRENN ID
calm-balcony-jet
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cornwall
Country
England
Date first listed
13 January 1988
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Tredarrup is a house, likely dating from the early 17th century, with extensions added in 1680 (as indicated by a datestone) and the 18th century. It is constructed of stone rubble with granite quoins and a moulded granite plinth. The roof is slate with gable ends and a catslide roof extending out to the rear. Original features include a moulded granite stack on the left-hand gable end and a projecting stone rubble stack on the right-hand gable end. A brick stack is present on the left-hand gable of the lower range.

The original plan was probably a two-room layout with a cross or through passage, with a lower end on the left. A projection to the rear of the passage likely housed a stair. Around the early 18th century, rear outshots were added to both the right-hand room and the left-hand room, forming a continuous catslide roofed extension. The stair is now situated to the rear of the left-hand room, and a datestone marked "1680" is visible in the rear wall. An additional room extension was added to the left-hand gable end, probably in the 18th century, and is heated by a gable-end stack.

The front façade has a regular 1:3 window arrangement. A moulded granite plinth runs around a central porch, which is constructed of granite ashlar with a rebuilt gable and a 20th-century door. The ground floor features two tall, reworked three-light mullion windows with tall, narrow mullions and renewed roughly cut granite lintels. The first floor has three tall, circa early 20th-century four-pane sashes. To the left of the 18th-century extension, there is a reworked two-light mullion window with a four-pane sash on the first floor.

The rear elevation displays a carved datestone of 1680 and a plaque carved "JOHN HOC-", alongside a further illegible plaque. The interior is not accessible.

Detailed Attributes

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