44, 45 AND 46 is a Grade II listed building in the Buckinghamshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 30 July 1984. A Mid 19th century Cottage. 2 related planning applications.

44, 45 AND 46

WRENN ID
little-brick-fog
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Buckinghamshire
Country
England
Date first listed
30 July 1984
Type
Cottage
Source
Historic England listing

Description

A group of three mid-19th century estate cottages forming an L-shaped plan. They are constructed of painted brick with old tiled pitched roofs. The roofs have gables and a brick modillion cornice under projecting eaves, along with tall brick chimney stacks, diagonally set and mostly in groups of two or three. Numbers 44, 45, and 46 present a five-window front. Number 44 is two windows wide, with an entrance in the left-hand bay protected by a tiled pitched hood on shaped brackets with pendants. A canted bay window with a penthouse tiled roof and modillion eaves is in the gabled right-hand bay of the ground floor. The first floor has headed two-light casement windows. The gable above the right-hand bay features a moulded brick framed recessed panel. Number 45 is two windows wide; the left-hand bay has an entrance with a square-headed brick porch, side openings, and a tiled pitched roof with modillion eaves and recessed panel. It has headed casements, three-light to the ground floor and two-light to the first. A gable above the entrance is also decorated with a recessed panel. Number 46 has one window facing the street, with the main front on the left-hand return containing two windows and a two-window later extension in a similar style. The gable end of the right-hand bay has a canted bay window with a penthouse tiled roof and modillion eaves. The left-hand entrance has a tiled pitched hood on shaped brackets with pendants, and the windows are two- and three-light leaded casements.

Number 45 is a three-bay, two-storey house with a gabled upper floor window over the central bay and a recessed panel in the gable, featuring dentil eaves and a gabled brick porch. It has leaded casements, three-light to the ground floor and two-light to the first floor, along with a small leaded window to the left of the porch.

Number 44 is a two-bay, two-storey house, featuring a gabled right-hand bay with a moulded brick framed sunk panel in the gable, a door in the left-hand bay with a pitched hood on brackets, and a canted bay window to the right. Leaded two-light casements are on the first floor. It has dentil eaves and two diagonal shaft flues leading to end stacks.

Detailed Attributes

Structured analysis including materials, construction techniques, architect attribution, and related listed building consent applications. Sign in or create a free account to view.

Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.