35 Church Street is a Grade II listed building in the Wiltshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 29 December 1950. House. 1 related planning application.
35 Church Street
- WRENN ID
- vast-cinder-lichen
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Wiltshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 29 December 1950
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Early 19th century, this is a three-storey building in an "L" shape. The main part is constructed of brick on a stone plinth, featuring brick flat arches and flat eaves with paired brackets. It has a slate roof with prominent stone kneelers, and plate glass sash windows. The upper floor has two three-light windows and a central, narrower window. On the ground floor, there are two three-light windows and a central half-glazed door within a painted stone Doric porch. The porch is characterised by two thin columns, wall pilasters, and an entablature, with side panels that are half-glazed, and double six-panel outer doors. A fire insurance mark is visible above the central first-floor windows. A large wing extends to the north-east, projecting with a full-height angular bay termination, built of brick with a slate roof. This bay features three windows with keystones over the heads. The ground floor of the wing curves to the south-east, incorporating a stone corbel mounted on the corner above. The return front, facing south-west, has later overlapped brick eaves bands. It features two three-light windows with glazing bars—a feature absent from the other windows—and a half-glazed door to the left of centre, accessed through a plain, modern brick porch with a flat, moulded stone roof. The building provides a pleasing conclusion to the curving line of Church Street. Rear extensions include three gabled structures, one presenting a stone gable wall with a saddlestone, and incorporating a reportedly medieval window with tracery, a feature potentially originating from a house used by those associated with the precentors of Salisbury, who held the rectory. Inside, there is a two-bay room with an arch-braced collar-beam roof, now known as "The Chapel".
Detailed Attributes
Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.