No 62 Including Pump Immediately To North And Forecourt is a Grade II listed building in the Torridge local planning authority area, England. First listed on 20 February 1958. House.

No 62 Including Pump Immediately To North And Forecourt

WRENN ID
solitary-loggia-summer
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Torridge
Country
England
Date first listed
20 February 1958
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

No 62, including the pump immediately to the north and the forecourt, is a house likely built in the late 18th century or early 19th century, with repairs made in 1911 by Christine Hamlyn. The building is constructed of rubble and features a gable-ended slate roof divided into two sections, with a stack that has a brick and rubble shaft on the right side of the roof.

The main part of the house is square in plan, containing one main room on each floor, with a fish cellar on the ground floor. The main entrance is located at first floor level. The gable end facing the sea has four storeys and is one window wide, featuring two-light casements stacked one above the other. On the ground floor, there is a half-glazed 19th-century door next to a 19th-century iron pump. The right side of the building, where the ground rises, is two storeys high and contains the main entrance with one-over-one windows. On the ground floor to the left, there is a 16-pane two-light casement, and above it, a 20-pane sash window with exposed sash boxes. There is a door opening in a lower-height addition to the right, which has a half-glazed 20th-century door above a small two-pane casement. A pent-roofed canopy covers a slate-roofed capping, and there is another door opening to the left of the principal door, featuring a plank door.

In front of the main entrance, there is an elevated forecourt with a wooden latticework balustrade and a gate. The interior has been largely modernised in the late 20th century, but features a chamfered and unstopped beam in the fish cellar and a similar beam on the ground floor. There is also a fireplace with a wooden bressumer on this floor. The roof is constructed with 18th-century collar beams.

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