Priory Lodge is a Grade II listed building in the Wiltshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 28 February 1952. House. 1 related planning application.
Priory Lodge
- WRENN ID
- tilted-cobble-stoat
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Wiltshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 28 February 1952
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Priory Lodge is a house dating from the 17th century, with alterations from the 18th and early 19th centuries. It is located on Brown Street. The building is three storeys high, constructed of red brick with a projecting plinth. The corners feature rusticated quoins, and there is a rendered cornice and parapet. A trace of 17th-century masonry remains at the rear, next to number 95, The Priory.
The front of the building is symmetrical, with six windows on the upper floor. These windows have sill courses and leaf-carved consoles. The ground floor incorporates a yard entry on the left, followed by a window, a door, and two more windows on the right. All windows have keystones and sash glazing without glazing bars. The front door consists of six fielded panels, with an 18th-century knocker and a plain arched fanlight. It is set within a doorcase featuring Doric pilasters, a broken entablature, and an open moulded dentil pediment. Diamond medallions are incorporated into the frieze above the pilasters, and there is rope swag and medallion ornament in low relief over the arch.
The side wall of Priory Lodge, which adjoins number 95, The Priory, has blocked mullioned windows, likely originally part of The Priory.
Priory Lodge is one of a group of buildings comprising numbers 87 to 97A (odd).
Detailed Attributes
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