Court Lodge Frampton Court is a Grade II listed building in the South Gloucestershire local planning authority area, England. A C15 House. 12 related planning applications.
Court Lodge Frampton Court
- WRENN ID
- lapsed-chalk-cobweb
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- South Gloucestershire
- Country
- England
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Court Lodge and Frampton Court are two houses, originally a single building. The core of the structure dates back to the 15th century, with significant alterations and extensions made in the 16th and 17th centuries. The north range was refaced in the 18th century, and a major alteration and division occurred around 1980. The houses are constructed of rubble, with double Roman and pantile roofs. They are arranged around a courtyard, although the east range is very slight.
The oldest fragments are found in the south range, which has been extensively rebuilt and features two storeys and two windows in the lower, formerly single-storey, section to the right, and two windows to the left. The window openings have irregular arrangements, including three reserved chamfered stone mullion windows with two lights each. One is similar with an ogee and hollow profile, another has a single reserved chamfered light, and a third has a three-light window with hollow-mould mullions, round heads to each light, and decorated spandrels. A central, gabled 20th-century porch fronts the range, and a two-centered arch, chamfered door frame is located at the far left. The north range is taller and has two storeys and three windows. These are two-light casements with round heads, set under hoodmoulds. A central, gabled 20th-century porch encloses a doorcase with an entablature, and a re-sited datestone, "1 A 1755," is positioned above. An inserted 20th-century window is located above the datestone. The east and west ends of the north range each have a single window.
A linking west range, also of two storeys, has late 20th-century windows on the lower level. Above these are two two-light, ovolo-moulded mullion windows under relieving arches, flanking a heavy, battered buttress which has now been pierced by a 20th-century casement. The rear of this range features similar windows and an arch, with evidence of one blocked. The rear of the north range has a doorcase with an entablature.
The interior of the south range retains a two-centered chamfered door frame and at least one cambered truss. The west range has one very deep chamfered beam and one inglenook.
Detailed Attributes
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