St Enoder Rectory is a Grade II listed building in the Cornwall local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 May 1988. Rectory. 1 related planning application.
St Enoder Rectory
- WRENN ID
- stranded-vault-amber
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cornwall
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 12 May 1988
- Type
- Rectory
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
St Enoder Rectory is a rectory built around 1830 to 1840, with alterations made in the later 19th and 20th centuries. It is constructed of granite rubble, with the front rendered and a painted rear wing. The roof is hipped and covered with asbestos slate, featuring stacks at the rear. The layout consists of a two-room plan with a central entrance leading to an entrance hall, and principal rooms located to the right and left. Originally, heating may have come from stacks at the ends, which have since been removed. There is a stair hall at the rear left and a two-storey service wing added in the later 19th century at the rear right.
The exterior stands two storeys high on a plinth, presenting a symmetrical three-window front. A central granite Doric portico features a 19th-century panelled and glazed inner door with a fanlight that has Gothic glazing bars. On either side of the portico are 12-pane sash windows from the 19th century. The first floor has three 9-pane sashes, some of which have been replaced in the 20th century. The eaves are deep and bracketed, while the right end of the building is blind. The rear wing on the right has a 12-pane sash and a two-light 6-pane casement on the ground floor, with two two-light 6-pane casements on the first floor, all of which are 20th-century. The rear of this wing includes two 20th-century single lights and two doors, with two additional single lights on the first floor. The left end of the wing is blind and not rendered. The left wing features a ground floor 20th-century 12-pane sash with sidelights and a first-floor 20th-century three-light casement. An 8-pane sash window lights the stair. There is also a small single-storey addition from the 19th century, made of rubble and brick, located at the angle of the main range. The interior has not been inspected.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- Sale history — 3 transactions since 2007
- Related listed building consents — 1 application
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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