Chantry Cottage Chantry House is a Grade II listed building in the Cotswold local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 February 1988. A C19 Rectory.
Chantry Cottage Chantry House
- WRENN ID
- pale-floor-bistre
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cotswold
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 12 February 1988
- Type
- Rectory
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Chantry House and Chantry Cottage is a former rectory built by James Piers St Aubyn around 1856. The building is constructed from coursed squared and dressed limestone, featuring a red tile roof. Each stack has a base made of coursed squared and dressed limestone, with shafts that are banded in squared and dressed limestone and red brick. The structure has a basic rectangular plan, with the cottage located at the north-east gable end.
The building stands 2 and a half storeys tall, with two-storey and one and a half storey extensions. The main garden front has three bays, with a gable front on the left side. There is a two-storey canted bay at the gable, which includes trefoil-headed stone-mullioned casements on the ground floor. The first floor features stone-mullioned casements with shouldered heads, while the right side has a four-light stone-mullioned trefoil-headed casement on the ground floor. Above, there is a two-light stone-mullioned casement and a three-light stone-mullioned casement with shouldered heads on the first floor, along with a two-light stone-mullioned casement in the attic above the canted bay.
The central entrance features a 19th-century segmental-pointed part-glazed door with four small panels at the bottom. A large 20th-century three-light roof dormer with steel casements is also present. To the left, there is a two-windowed extension that includes one two-light and one three-light stone-mullioned casement with shouldered heads, and similar two-light casements in the half dormers on the first floor. The one and a half storey extension to the right has a 20th-century double glass door.
On the entrance front, trefoil-headed stone-mullioned windows are found on the ground floor, with similar stone-mullioned casements with shouldered heads on the first floor. The central entrance has double part-glazed doors set within a flat-chamfered pointed-arched surround with a segmental-pointed arch. The building features large gable-end stacks, some of which are twin, with one stack pierced by a lancet-shaped opening. A wall with a segmental pointed arch extends north-east from the front left-hand corner of the entrance front for approximately 15 meters. The interior of the house has not been inspected.
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