Clevedon is a Grade II listed building in the North Somerset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 20 January 1986. House. 4 related planning applications.
Clevedon
- WRENN ID
- quiet-jade-fern
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- North Somerset
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 20 January 1986
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a mid-19th century house constructed of random rubble with limestone dressings, slate roofs with raised coped verges and finials, and ridge and gable stacks. It is built in a Gothic style with an irregular plan. The house has two storeys and is arranged with two bays to the right and three bays set back to the left. The gable end to the left features a two-light casement with a chamfered mullion on the ground floor and a single light above with a chamfered transom and trefoil head. To the right is a mullion and transom window with ogee heads and upper tracery. The entrance has a four-centred arch and relieving arch. A small two-light window with trefoil heads is also present, alongside a two-light gabled dormer with trefoil heads. On the ground floor to the right is a plain mullion and transom window with paired sashes with trefoil heads, and above, in the gable, is a mullion and transom window in a plain limestone surround with a quatrefoil above the relieving arch. The roof extends to a lower eaves level to the left of the gable. On the inner side of the gable end is a first-floor single light with a trefoil head. The right return has an external stack which is corbelled out at the upper level; there is also a 20th-century plate-glass window in a limestone surround at both ground and first floor levels, as well as a porch with a pointed arched door and a glazed addition above. A rear wing is also present with a large, weathered external stack. Where the gable to the left meets the front gable, there are limestone quoins with carved trefoils. The left return has the gable end of the main range carried over a cross wing with bargeboards, a weathered external stack to the side of the cross wing, and a further single-storey block with a steeply pitched roof. The rear has a gable end to the left with a 20th-century plate-glass ground floor window and a mullion and transom window with trefoil heads in the gable end. Central bays feature a gabled dormer matching that on the front. A wing to the right has a gable end with a two-light casement with trefoil heads. The main range extends further to the right, although this portion was not fully visible during the survey in March 1985. The interior was not inspected.
Detailed Attributes
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