Grange Court is a Grade II listed building in the Forest of Dean local planning authority area, England. First listed on 4 July 1985. Farmhouse. 4 related planning applications.
Grange Court
- WRENN ID
- second-threshold-willow
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Forest of Dean
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 4 July 1985
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Grange Court is a large farmhouse dating from the 16th, 17th, and early 19th centuries. The wings are rough-rendered, the centre is smooth, and the right return is exposed brick. It has a tiled roof. The building is a wide H-plan, comprising three sections. The central part features a single-storey gabled porch built of rendered brick, with a boarded double door set within stepped voussoirs and pilasters at the sides. The porch has scalloped bargeboards. To the left is a late 20th-century window on both the ground and first floors. To the right are two 2-light casement windows. Above the porch is a small single-light casement, and to the right a 20th-century 2-light casement. The left wing has a tall slit window in its right return, which contains a window. Its gable facade has two windows per floor, with the right-hand windows being dummy; a 2-light casement is on the left of the ground floor, and a wider 20th-century window on the first floor. A large blind oval is set within the gable, and the wing has scalloped bargeboards. The right-hand wing has a blind slit window on its left return. It has tripartite sash windows on both the ground and first floors on its main face, a blind oval in its gable, and scalloped bargeboards. Brick chimneys are located internally at the junction between the left cross wing and the main wing, laterally from the main wing slightly to the right, and laterally from the right cross wing; all have oversailing caps. The interior was not inspected, but the Victoria County History records close-studded timber framing internally in the left cross wing, 17th-century timber framing in the central main part, and an early 19th-century construction for the right cross wing. The building forms a group with the adjacent stable to the left.
Detailed Attributes
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