Tudor Cottage is a Grade II listed building in the Exmoor National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 October 2002. A Post-medieval House. 1 related planning application.

Tudor Cottage

WRENN ID
worn-timber-hazel
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Exmoor National Park
Country
England
Date first listed
14 October 2002
Type
House
Period
Post-medieval
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: sale history · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

Tudor Cottage is a house dating from the early 17th century, with extensions from the 18th century and alterations made in the 19th century. It is constructed of whitewashed and rendered stone rubble, topped with a cedar shingle roof featuring gabled ends and raised eaves at the front, while the rear outshut has double Roman clay tiles. The building has a gable-end stack with a brick shaft.

The layout consists of a two-room and through-passage plan. The larger room on the right, which serves as the hall and kitchen, is heated by a large gable-end stack and includes an integral newel stair leading to two attic chambers. The smaller service room on the left appears to have been rebuilt and reduced to a single-storey outshut. An additional outshut was added to the rear of the right-hand room around the 18th century.

The exterior features two storeys and an asymmetrical two-window east front. The ground floor on the right has a 17th-century four-light wooden ovolo-moulded window with casements, while the doorway on the left has a chamfered wooden doorframe with a triangular head and a 20th-century plank door. Above, there are two three-light casements with the original wall-plate visible at cill level, and a lean-to roof at the south end. The rear outshut on the left has a lean-to roof that extends as a canopy over the rear through-passage doorway, which features a chamfered timber frame with a triangular head and a plank door.

Inside, the first floor is supported by deeply chamfered cross-beams with large hollow step stops. The partition between the through-passage and the hall/kitchen is likely a plank-and-muntin screen. The doorways at the front and rear of the through-passage, as well as those in the screen and at the base of the newel stairs, all have original chamfered wooden frames with triangular heads. The hall/kitchen fireplace has been blocked by a 20th-century tiled chimneypiece, and there is a chamfered doorframe leading to the rear outshut. The two attic chambers have a central partition with a chamfered doorframe and hollow step stops; they are ceiled but feature exposed large purlins, with a diagonal ridgepiece and exposed common rafters above an inserted suspended ceiling.

Overall, Tudor Cottage is a small early 17th-century house that retains many original features.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 1 transaction since 1995
  • Related listed building consents — 1 application
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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