41 And 41A, Pickwick is a Grade II listed building in the Wiltshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 20 December 1960. House.
41 And 41A, Pickwick
- WRENN ID
- noble-wicket-dale
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Wiltshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 20 December 1960
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
41 and 41A Pickwick are two houses built in the mid to late 18th century, with No 41 and two bays of No 41A constructed around 1760. No 41A also includes one bay from a three-bay house to the left, which is now the Masonic Hall, built later in the 18th century. The main range has an ashlar front on the east side, while the south side facing the road is made of coursed rubble. The north gable is coped and features a stack, with a rear wing situated between Nos 41 and 41A.
The east front has two hipped dormers and a formal appearance with raised angle strips and a band, as well as a coved eaves cornice. It features a three-window range of 12-pane sash windows set in moulded architraves, with a central door also in an architrave topped by a pediment on brackets. The rear wing has a coved eaves cornice, one small dormer, and a three-window range that includes three upper flush cyma-moulded two-light windows. The ground floor has a 12-pane sash window in an architrave surround with a cornice, a pair of 12-pane sashes also in architrave surrounds, and a six-panel door leading to No 41A in a bead-moulded architrave with a pediment on brackets.
To the left, the right-hand bay of the adjoining house is made of ochre-washed rubble with a stone-tiled roof and features two-light flush cyma-moulded windows on each floor, with a dripstone above the lower window. North of the east front, there is a rendered addition with a coped gable and a stack at the north end, displaying asymmetrical fenestration. This addition has long two-light flush cyma-moulded windows with dripstones on the first floor east and first floor north, a single light with a dripstone and a 20th-century door on the ground floor east, and two nine-pane windows on the ground floor north. There is a low wing behind, and the main range features a dog-leg stair with column newels at the center.
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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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