Sutton Parva House is a Grade II listed building in the Wiltshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 1 July 1986. Detached house. 1 related planning application.
Sutton Parva House
- WRENN ID
- tired-pedestal-holly
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Wiltshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 1 July 1986
- Type
- Detached house
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Sutton Parva House is a detached house dating from the mid-18th century, situated in the village of Sutton Veny, Tytherington. The house is constructed of coursed rubble stone with a tiled roof, featuring a hip to the right side, and has brick stacks. It is arranged in an āLā shape, two storeys high, and has a four-window front. The main facade incorporates casement windows. The front door, located to the right of the centre, is made up of six fielded panels. To the right of the door is a three-light recessed mullioned casement window, while to the left are two three-light and one two-light mullioned casements, the two-light window being situated within a blocked doorway. A plat band runs along the first floor, above which are three three-light mullioned casements and one two-light casement. The left return has a two-light casement and nine-pane sashes set within plain ashlar surrounds, alongside an external brick stack. The rear elevation includes 20th-century casement windows, a glazed door, and a rear wing with two-light casements and sashes in stone architraves, each featuring a keystone. At the time of a survey in July 1985, the interior was inaccessible but was reported to contain chamfered beams and an open fireplace with a chamfered lintel resting on chamfered stone jambs. It is also noted that the house is likely to be a rebuild of an earlier timber-framed building, as suggested in the Victoria County History of Wiltshire.
Detailed Attributes
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