Wyck Hill Lodge Opposite Wyckhill Farm is a Grade II listed building in the Cotswold local planning authority area, England. First listed on 30 January 1987. A C19 Lodge. 5 related planning applications.
Wyck Hill Lodge Opposite Wyckhill Farm
- WRENN ID
- stony-sill-ash
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cotswold
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 30 January 1987
- Type
- Lodge
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Wyck Hill Lodge, opposite Wyckhill Farm, is an early 19th-century former lodge, built in the style of S. P. Cockerell. It originally served as a lodge to Wyckhill House. The lodge is constructed of coursed squared and dressed limestone with a slate roof and ashlar stacks. Its design is 'T' shaped, with a 19th-century extension at the rear left.
The main facade was originally symmetrical, with a gable projecting forward at the centre, flanked by covered, open-sided porches. These porches feature flattened ogee arches and quatrefoil-shaped columns at the corners. A canted bay window projects from the gable end, featuring a three-light window with pointed arched stone-mullioned windows and coloured glass in the spandrels. The roof above this bay window curves upwards to an engaged pineapple finial, topped with a heraldic shield bearing an eagle and serpent. A similar bay window is located at the left gable end. A studded plank door is set within a 'Tudor'-arched surround in the right wall of the projecting gable end. The decorative bargeboard features pierced decoration. A central triple stack, set diagonally, has incised decoration and a moulded capping. The interior has not been inspected. 20th-century extensions are not of special interest.
Detailed Attributes
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