Coach House, Gazebo, Gate Piers And Garden Walls To The Vicarage is a Grade II listed building in the Wiltshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 20 February 1975. Coach house, gazebo.
Coach House, Gazebo, Gate Piers And Garden Walls To The Vicarage
- WRENN ID
- half-flagstone-lake
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Wiltshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 20 February 1975
- Type
- Coach house, gazebo
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Coach House, gazebo, gate piers, and garden walls to The Vicarage are structures dating from the 18th century and early 19th century. They feature limestone rubble walls. The gazebo is located at the north-east corner of the garden and is constructed of coursed rubble with a pyramidal stone slate roof topped by a ball finial. It has two storeys and one window on each side. The first-floor windows have been restored to include four rows of four small panes, with the cills raised to their original height, although the smaller lower windows are missing.
To the right of the gazebo, there is a wall approximately 4 meters high and 45 meters long, which has various blocked openings. The wall to the left, located in The Glebe, is about 3 meters high and 70 meters long, also featuring blocked openings, along with two later brick buttresses on the right and a semicircular rubblestone wellhead, likely a later addition, at the left end.
The entrance to the coach house is at the south-east corner, adjacent to The Glebe and Mill Street, and is marked by tall ashlar gate piers. To the left of this entrance, a wall approximately 3 meters high extends along Mill Street for about 75 meters, with a semi-elliptical stone archway in the center that leads to a 20th-century gate. At the south-west corner, there are 20th-century brick piers and gates attached to the western part of the wall, which is made of rubblestone, ashlar, and concrete repairs, standing about 1.5 meters high and approximately 45 meters long, running alongside a brook.
The coach house itself is a two-storey building from the early 19th century, constructed of coursed limestone rubble with a hipped Welsh slate roof, featuring semicircular arched doorways and lunette windows across its six-window front. The interior has not been inspected.
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
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- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
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