The Grange is a Grade II listed building in the Wiltshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 20 December 1960. A C18 House.

The Grange

WRENN ID
heavy-doorway-martin
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Wiltshire
Country
England
Date first listed
20 December 1960
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

The Grange is a house dating from the 17th and 18th centuries, possibly built on an earlier structure. It features roughcast rubble stone and stone tiled roofs, with two storeys and an attic. The building has a complex plan, originally designed in an L-shape with a barn attached to the east. The north front was altered in the early 18th and early 19th centuries.

The house has a three-window range, with a channelled pilaster strip to the right and a raised floor band. The right side includes a pair of 18th-century 12-pane sash windows in bead-moulded surrounds on each floor, while the centre features tripartite windows on both floors, which appear to be early 19th century. The ground floor window is larger and has a triple keystone. To the right, there is a moulded ashlar doorcase with a triple keystone and a six-panel door, along with a 17th-century or earlier two-light hollow-chamfered-moulded mullion window.

At the angle to the projecting north wing, there is a one-storey, square-plan 18th-century addition that is fully rusticated, featuring a raised plinth cornice and parapet. This addition has a 16-pane sash window with a triple keystone on the north and west sides. The north wing has a channelled pilaster at the northwest angle, a plain window on the west side, and a large stack on the east wall.

East of the main range, there is an attached barn with a coped east gable and a six-bay collar-truss roof. The south side of the barn has a dormer gable, two doors, a buttress, and a window. The south side of the main range includes a 19th-century single light and a two-light window above the door, which is aligned with the front door, along with a 20th-century door and window. To the left, a tall wing extends south with a large outside stack at the south end, an attic casement, and paired 12-pane sashes in bead-moulded surrounds on the main floors. The east return of this wing has an upper casement and a 19th-century sash, with a ground floor featuring a pair of 12-pane sashes in bead-moulded surrounds, a door with an overlight, and a 16-pane sash.

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