1, 2, 3 Coxwell Court is a Grade II listed building in the Cotswold local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 June 1948. Houses. 12 related planning applications.
1, 2, 3 Coxwell Court
- WRENN ID
- tall-mantel-ivy
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cotswold
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 14 June 1948
- Type
- Houses
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The building at 1, 2, 3 Coxwell Court comprises three houses, now converted into flats. It dates primarily to the late 17th and early 18th centuries, with further work in the mid-18th century, and later alterations in the 20th century. The front facade is rendered with cement, while the rear is constructed of coursed limestone rubble. The roof is covered with stone slates, with rebuilt brick and rendered chimney stacks at the ridge and left end.
The house to the left is a three-storey, seven-window range. The central house is two storeys, with a left-hand section featuring seven windows in plain reveals; the first floor has six-by-six-pane sashes, while the windows above have similar three-by-three-pane sashes and five blind openings. The remaining house to the right is a simpler design. The ground floor has six six-by-six-pane sashes in moulded architraves; the central doorway is framed by attached Ionic columns, a pulvinated frieze, a modillion cornice, and a pediment, leading to a six-panel door. A first-floor cill band, moulded cornice, and parapet complete the facade.
The central house has three unmoulded mullion-and-transom windows on the first floor, while the ground floor to the right has two six-by-six-pane sashes in moulded architraves, with a blind window and a 20th-century door in similar architraves to the left. The house to the right features two two-light unmoulded stone mullion-and-transom windows on the first floor, with two similar stone-mullion windows above. A six-by-six-pane sash is set within a plain reveal on the ground floor, alongside a late 18th century doorcase with attached Doric columns and a head formed of large rusticated voussoirs with a vermiculated keystone, now containing a 20th-century door. A cill band runs from the right-hand house’s first floor, and ramps down to continue across the centre and right-hand houses; the centre and right-hand houses share a timber modillion eaves cornice that is continuous with number 49 Coxwell Street.
The left return facade incorporates two Venetian windows in flat, unmoulded stone surrounds. The centre lights have been cut down and now accommodate 20th-century doors.
The interior has undergone considerable alteration and was not inspected. Coxwell Court was previously an old people's home, now converted into a number of flats, with 20th-century houses built in the area that was formerly the garden.
Detailed Attributes
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