3, HIGH STREET (See details for further address information) is a Grade II listed building in the Exmoor National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 18 October 1995. House.

3, HIGH STREET (See details for further address information)

WRENN ID
waiting-jade-soot
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Exmoor National Park
Country
England
Date first listed
18 October 1995
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Nos 3 and 5 High Street is a house that has been divided into two dwellings. It dates from the 17th century or earlier and was remodelled and extended in the early 19th century. The building is constructed of stone rubble with a plastered front and has a slate roof with gabled ends. The gable-end and rear lateral stacks are rendered with set-offs.

The layout features a 3-room-and-cross/through-passage plan, with the lower end on the left and the inner room on the right, which is heated by gable-end stacks. The lower end may have originally been unheated, while the hall has a lateral stack at the back. In the early 19th century, the house was remodelled, extended, and converted into two separate houses, with No. 3 occupying the lower end and No. 5 the high end. A narrow two-storey outshut was added across the back, a wing was constructed behind the low end, and single-storey outhouses were built in front of the low end.

The exterior is two storeys high with an asymmetrical three-window front facing southeast. On the ground floor, there are two early 19th-century 12-pane sash windows on the right and a 19th-century two-light casement with glazing bars on the left. The first floor features three later 19th-century or 20th-century three-light casements with horizontal glazing bars. There are plank doors at the centre and left of centre, with the left door having a heavy frame and a simple flat canopy, while the doorway on the right has a small overlight. A single-storey range of outhouses is positioned at right angles on the left side. At the rear, the two-storey outshut encloses a central lateral stack, and the main roof extends over the wing on the right, from which a range of single-storey outhouses extends, featuring small casements.

The interior has not been inspected, but it likely contains 19th-century features as well as earlier elements of interest.

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