Lexham Lodge is a Grade II listed building in the Cheltenham local planning authority area, England. First listed on 26 November 1998. House. 10 related planning applications.

Lexham Lodge

WRENN ID
upper-spire-marsh
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cheltenham
Country
England
Date first listed
26 November 1998
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Lexham Lodge is a mid-19th century house, later used as an office and then a hospital. It is constructed of stucco with hipped slate roofs and features iron balconies.

The two-storey house, with a basement, presents four first-floor windows, with the right-hand section projecting forward. A four-panel front door, with a semicircular fanlight in a moulded surround supported on corbels, is set back from the centre. The ground floor has three single-pane sashes with tooled sills and moulded architraves incorporating acanthus corbels supporting cornices. To the return of the projecting section is a round-arched window. The first floor features three wider two-over-two paned sashes with cambered heads in tooled surrounds, sills on decorative feet; one window to the right is blind.

A full-height canted bay is present on the left return, with windows matching those elsewhere. The rear has stacks with cornices. Railings with scroll-headed balusters flank the steps, and a balcony with a scrolled balustrade runs across the front of the building, to the right of the steps.

The interior has not been inspected. The house occupies a prominent corner site and contributes to the group value of the surrounding area, alongside Charlton Lawn, Cudnall Street, and No.1 Greenway Lane.

Detailed Attributes

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