Oatridge House is a Grade II listed building in the Stroud local planning authority area, England. First listed on 26 April 1984. Dwelling, farmhouse. 5 related planning applications.

Oatridge House

WRENN ID
outer-obsidian-clover
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Stroud
Country
England
Date first listed
26 April 1984
Type
Dwelling, farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Oatridge House is an early 18th-century dwelling, originally a farmhouse. It is constructed of squared painted rubble with a concrete tile roof, although stone slates are present on the return wing to the right and on the front slopes of the main gable on the right. The building follows an L-shaped plan, with prominent stacks situated on the left gable and a former gable facing the road, now partly hidden by the later Hazeldene Cottage. The house is two storeys high with attics, featuring a modern three-window front with two-light casements and a late 20th-century central door and porch. The return wing on the right has a single window and a large plain wall area corresponding to a stack within. The left gable has two stone drip courses forming a reversed string course, which is not continuous across the whole gable, along with a small window with a stone lintol cut to a small ogee shape. The right gable rises to three storeys.

Inside, the roof structure features heavy collar and tie beams without struts or bracing. There are two newel staircases in cylindrical wells, one to the right of each gable stack, with the staircase on the left gable having solid sawn oak treads with shaped soffites. Some blocked openings are visible in the former external gable facing the road. The interior also contains a variety of heavy beams with deep chamfers, and in one bedroom, a roll-mould stop-chamfer.

Detailed Attributes

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