Angers Farmhouse And Attached Stable is a Grade II listed building in the South Gloucestershire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 December 1984. Farmhouse.
Angers Farmhouse And Attached Stable
- WRENN ID
- muted-soffit-sedge
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- South Gloucestershire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 5 December 1984
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Angers Farmhouse and attached stable is a farmhouse that has been converted into a house, dating from the 17th century with later alterations and additions. These include a later 17th-century rear wing and an 18th-century attached stable. The building is constructed of rubble and rendered, with double Roman pantiled roofs. The stable features slates at the front and corrugated asbestos at the rear, with brick upper sections on the stacks at the east gable and to the left of center. The structure is L-shaped, with a former through passage, and has two storeys with four windows, all of which are 20th-century casements in two and three lights.
There is a two-storey porch with a hipped roof in the second bay from the right, featuring a 20th-century door with a cambered head. The south front and south side have single-storey extensions from the 20th century, and there is a buttress to the right. The rear south side includes a 19th-century rubble stable wing that has a loading door at the upper level and a door under a timber lintel with a gauged brick relieving arch. On the north side of the main block, there is a two-light window in the gable with a chamfered mullion.
The rear of the building has a gable with a large external stack at the north end. A window has replaced the original through passage door, with two windows on the first floor and two on the ground floor, all 20th-century casements except for the ground right window, which has chamfered mullions and early 19th-century fittings. The 17th-century rear wing has two storeys and one window, all of which are 20th-century, with a straight joint between the wing and the stable.
Inside, the front north room features an 18th-century shell recess and shelves, boxed beams, and moulded door frames in the hall. There is a straight stair to the rear left of the passage with square panelling on the side.
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- No EPC on record for this property
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