Evenlode House 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.
Evenlode House
- WRENN ID
- over-lime-rush
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Cotswold
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 25 August 1960
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Evenlode House is a detached house dating from the 16th to early 17th centuries, with additions and alterations in the 19th century and to the west and south fronts in the early 20th century. The house is constructed of large, regularly coursed squared and dressed sandstone, with a roof of limestone slate and ashlar stacks. It has an L-shaped plan, with a projecting stack and a stairs projection to the rear left, partially hidden by a 19th-century single-storey lean-to. A service wing extends to the back rear right, with a further 19th-century extension to its gable end.
The west front, which faces the road, is of two storeys and a garret, with five bays. It features two two-storey canted bay windows with six panes of glass on the left side. Cotswold dormers with moulded corners and slit lights are positioned above, with a four-light raking dormer further to the right. The windows are predominantly one and two-light casements with 19th-century ovolo-moulded stone mullions, leaded panes, and stopped hoods. A 20th-century eight-panelled door provides access. Original ovolo-moulded stone-mullioned casements are found in the left gable end.
The rear of the main body includes two original double-chamfered stone-mullioned casements, one partially obscured, with stopped hoods to the stairs projection; one is a two-light window and the other a three-light window. An original two-light ovolo-moulded stone-mullioned window is present in the service wing, along with a blocked example, and a further two-light ovolo-moulded stone-mullioned window. 20th-century casements with and without glazing bars are also present. The main body has flat gable-end coping with roll-cross saddles. The house has both a gable and an axial stack, with axial stacks also present in the service wing. The interior was not inspected.
Detailed Attributes
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