East Lavant Lodge, Woodhouse And Yard And Garden Walls is a Grade II listed building in the South Downs National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 28 January 1986. Cottage.

East Lavant Lodge, Woodhouse And Yard And Garden Walls

WRENN ID
narrow-rubble-ridge
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
South Downs National Park
Country
England
Date first listed
28 January 1986
Type
Cottage
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

East Lavant Lodge is a cottage that was part of the former Goodwood Estate, dating from the early to mid-19th century. It features flint walls with yellow brick dressings on the front and a combination of yellow and red brick dressings at the rear. The first floor has later tile hanging. The roof is hipped and covered with plain tiles. The front elevation includes sash windows that are four panes wide, with four additional sash windows on the first floor. On the ground floor, there are two sash windows with cambered heads and doorways located in the outer bays. The northwest entrance has a half-glazed and panelled door, while the southeast entrance has a late 19th or early 20th century gabled porch in front of a two-panelled door. The rear elevation has sash windows with glazing bars and a blocked doorway, along with a brick lean-to that features a large modern window.

Inside, the cottage retains simple 19th-century four-panelled doors and architrave frames, as well as cupboard doors on both the ground and first floors. There are 19th-century fireplace surrounds in the easternmost and middle bedrooms on the first floor. The rear of the cottage is connected by flint yard walls to a woodhouse or washhouse located to the northeast. The southeast yard wall appears to be of earlier construction, while the northwest yard wall matches the appearance of the house walls. The single-storey northeast woodhouse/washhouse has a front wall made of alternating bands of red brick and flint, which is older than the other three walls that are constructed of flint with a yellow brick eaves course. The front wall features two 19th-century ledged doors and two two-light windows with transoms, styled similarly to the windows in East Lavant Lodge. Additionally, there is a high flint wall attached to the southeast corner of No 6 Lavant Lodge, which forms the eastern boundary of the gardens for both No 6 Lavant Lodge and East Lavant Lodge, extending south and connecting to the southeast pavilion of East Lavant Lodge.

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