Icomb Lodge is a Grade II listed building in the Cotswold local planning authority area, England. First listed on 25 August 1960. House. 6 related planning applications.

Icomb Lodge

WRENN ID
deep-pedestal-spindle
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cotswold
Country
England
Date first listed
25 August 1960
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Icomb Lodge is a house dating from the late 17th and early 18th centuries, with extensions added in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. The main body of the house is constructed of ashlar, while an extension is of coursed squared and roughly dressed limestone. The front has stone slate roofing, the rear has concrete tile roofing, and there are ashlar stacks. The building has a rectangular plan with a central stair projection at the rear. A 19th-century extension adjoins the main body to the rear right, and a lean-to extension is located at the rear left. Another extension is set to the right of the main body.

The main body features a flat-chamfered plinth, and is two storeys and an attic. The front facade is four windows wide, with a single 2-light roof dormer at the rear. The windows are mainly two-light, double-chamfered stone-mullioned casements with moulded hoods, with one single-light window of the same design. A 19th-century plank door is set within a basket-headed surround with a keystone and an open pediment supported on moulded stone brackets. The rear stair projection is two and a half storeys high and has a 2-light hollow-chamfered stone-mullioned casement. A single-storey lean-to extension to the rear left features a possibly reused 3-light ovolo-moulded stone-mullioned window. The extension to the right of the main body is two storeys high with two windows to the first floor and four to the ground floor; the windows are two, three, and four-light casements. One window has a concrete lintel with a keystone, and another has a small fire window with a timber lintel. All windows are metal casements with horizontal glazing bars. A gabled 19th-century extension projects forwards to the left of the stair projection.

Inside, there are some late 17th-century three-panelled doors and a late 17th- to early 18th-century dog leg staircase with turned balusters. There are fireplaces, some with exposed bressumer beams and others with dressed rectangular surrounds. A spine beam is present on the ground floor.

Detailed Attributes

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