1 And 2, Stanedge Road is a Grade II listed building in the Peak District National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 December 1997. House.

1 And 2, Stanedge Road

WRENN ID
twisted-cobalt-vermeil
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Peak District National Park
Country
England
Date first listed
5 December 1997
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

1 and 2 Stanedge Road is a pair of houses that originated as a single dwelling in the late 17th century, with alterations made in the 19th and 20th centuries. The building is constructed from coursed and rubble limestone with sandstone dressings and features a stone slate roof.

The exterior is two storeys high and has a two-window range. A former outshut at the rear was raised to two storeys in the 19th century and now has its own roof. The doorway to the left of the centre, leading into No. 2, has a 20th-century oak boarded door set in an original quoined opening. To the left, there is a renewed four-light double-chamfered mullioned window with diamond-pane leaded lights, and above it, a renewed three-light window in the same style.

The house on the right, No. 1, features a cemented chamfered surround to a four-light casement window, with a three-light casement above it in a quoined opening. The roof has a short central ridge stack, and an end stack on the left is positioned towards the rear of the ridge.

At the rear, No. 2 retains an original 17th-century three-light double-chamfered mullioned window.

Inside No. 2, there is a spine beam and oak common joists, along with a small 17th-century wall cupboard featuring a lozenge motif. A single-light window from the 17th century is present in the rear wall, and the floorboards are made of oak. The original roof timbers include a collar that indicates the position of a former smoke-hood against the central stack.

In No. 1, there is a transverse beam with a deep chamfer, and oak floorboards are visible on the first floor, with joists likely to survive but not visible. Additionally, there are two 17th-century panelled doors in the front ground-floor room.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 1 transaction since 2010
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  • Radon risk assessment
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