Trevrea is a Grade II listed building in the Cornwall local planning authority area, England. First listed on 10 February 1967. House, offices. 1 related planning application.

Trevrea

WRENN ID
sacred-lime-plover
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cornwall
Country
England
Date first listed
10 February 1967
Type
House, offices
Source
Historic England listing

Description

This is a house, originally containing offices on the ground floor, dating to the early 19th century with limited later alterations. It is constructed of slatestone rubble with granite dressings and granite long and short quoins. The roof is covered in asbestos slate with ridge tiles and gable ends, with a gable end stack to the left featuring a brick shaft; a stack on the right gable end has been removed. The rear roof slope is bitumenised slate. The original layout comprised two rooms, with a central entrance and principal rooms to the front right and left, each heated by a gable end stack. A central stair tower is positioned to the rear, and a single-room plan wing extends to the rear right, providing service accommodation and heated by a stack on the left side. An addition, approximately early to mid-19th century, was built to the rear left, consisting of one storey and a loft, set in the angle of the stair tower. The front elevation is symmetrical with three windows and presents as two storeys. All the windows are early 19th century, featuring flat stone arches with keystones and long and short granite jambs. The first floor has a central 12-pane sash window, while the ground and first floors on the left and right each have a 12-pane sash window with sidelights. A central 19th-century six-panel door with a Gothic-glazed overlight, recessed within granite jambs, provides access. The left end of the building is hidden by roughcast, and the right end is concealed by an adjoining property. The rear of the house features a stair tower with a hipped roof and a 20th-century stair light. To the right is the one-storey and loft addition, with a two-light window with shutters on the ground floor and a single six-pane window above. To the left, the rear wing is two storeys high, incorporating a 19th-century two-light five-pane casement, a 19th-century 16-pane sash window, and a 20th-century door with a slate hood. The first floor of this wing has two 19th-century 16-pane sash windows. The interior remains inaccessible but may retain features typical of the early 19th century.

Detailed Attributes

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