Toll House is a Grade II listed building in the Cornwall local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 May 1988. Toll house. 2 related planning applications.
Toll House
- WRENN ID
- tilted-loft-pigeon
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cornwall
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 12 May 1988
- Type
- Toll house
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The toll house, now a house, dates from the early 19th century, with alterations made in the later 19th and 20th centuries. It is constructed of stone rubble, with the right-hand portion slate-hung. The roof is hipped and slate-covered, featuring ridge tiles and a chimney stack with a brick shaft. The building originally comprised a single room, entered via a porch on the front right, with the room situated to the left and a heating stack in the left side. A small, single-storey addition was added to the right side in the later 19th century. The two-storey front is asymmetrical, featuring two windows. On the ground floor, a 19th-century 16-pane sash window is positioned to the left, with a cambered arch above. A gabled, open-fronted porch is on the right, containing a plank inner door with a glazed panel. The front and right side are slate-hung, along with a single-storey lean-to addition to the right. The first floor front has a 19th-century 16-pane pivoted window to the left and a smaller multi-pane window to the right. The left side of the building features a 9-pane casement window at ground floor level. The rear is entirely slate-hung, with a small single-pane light at ground floor, and a bowed 9-pane light of the 19th century to the left. A single 20th-century window is located on the first floor. The interior remains uninspected.
Detailed Attributes
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