24, Pickwick is a Grade II listed building in the Wiltshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 20 December 1960. Cottage. 2 related planning applications.
24, Pickwick
- WRENN ID
- seventh-cellar-peregrine
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Wiltshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 20 December 1960
- Type
- Cottage
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a pair of cottages, built in 1730 and now combined into a single house. They are constructed from rubble stone with stone-tiled roofs, prominent coped gables, and end wall stacks. The cottages are two storeys high with an attic. The front of the building has flush quoins and a dripcourse, with a symmetrical arrangement of two-light, flush cyma-moulded mullion windows to each side. A central doorway, originally paired, is now blocked, sheltered by a hood supported by three brackets. A datestone above the doorway reads "AHS 1730". An attic window with two lights and a dripstone is on the east side, while a single-light attic window, also with a dripstone, is located on the west side. A lower addition extends from the west end, featuring a ridge stack, one first-floor two-light mullion window, and three ground-floor doors. The rear wall has a long, single-light window to the right and a range of two-light windows to the left. The rear of the west addition features a single range of two-light windows.
Detailed Attributes
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