Tickenham House is a Grade II listed building in the North Somerset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 11 October 1961. House. 5 related planning applications.

Tickenham House

WRENN ID
rusted-soffit-marsh
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North Somerset
Country
England
Date first listed
11 October 1961
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Tickenham House is a farmhouse, now a house, dating back to around 1700, with significant alterations and restoration in the 20th century. An earlier farmhouse, built in the late 16th or early 17th century, is attached to the right, with further alterations occurring around 1948.

The earlier farmhouse is constructed of rubble, with the first floor rendered, and has a pantiled roof and a ridge stack. The later building is of rubble with a hipped slate roof and stacks to the sides. The earlier farmhouse is two storeys high (originally one and a half, with the roof raised) and has three windows; they are all 20th-century metal casements. The ground floor has a 2-light and a 3-light casement, along with a door to the right. A wing set back to the right has a 3-light casement on both the ground and first floors, featuring a catslide roof to the end with two 2-light casements at ground floor. The right return has two lean-tos of different sizes, each with a door, a single light to the front and a 2-light casement to the rear, and a 3-light casement in the gable end. The rear has a catslide roof, two 20th-century flat-headed dormers, a stack to the rear left, and an attached lean-to. There is a 3-light casement on the left, and a 2-light and two small single lights to the right, along with a door which may lead to the rear of a through passage.

The later farmhouse is two storeys and five windows in width, with 20th-century sash windows in exposed boxes. The central entrance features a 6-panelled door in a reeded surround with a flat hood on brackets. A limestone string course runs above the lintels of the ground floor windows. Deep, bracketed eaves are present. The left return has two windows matching the front, with the string course continued. Attached to the rear left is a one-and-a-half-storey wing with a 20th-century French window, a double Roman tiled roof, and a roof light. The rear gable end of the wing to the right has three small 20th-century sashes at ground floor and a paired sash above. There is a door on the inner side. The rear of the main house has a first-floor sash window matching the front and a small 6-pane sash window. A single-storey addition is located in the angle, with a sash window. An attached block to the rear centre is single-storey, with two sashes and a large gable stack. The interior was not inspected.

Detailed Attributes

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