Iver Lodge is a Grade II listed building in the Buckinghamshire local planning authority area, England. House. 6 related planning applications.

Iver Lodge

WRENN ID
strange-paling-primrose
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Buckinghamshire
Country
England
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Iver Lodge is a house dating from 1792. It was built of yellow brick and has a slate roof hidden behind a parapet. The house was originally constructed for the Boswell family. The main entrance front features a central splayed bay. The ground floor side windows are three-light units with semicircular recessed panels above. The front door has a similar recessed panel and is flanked by two-pane sash windows, as is the first-floor window directly above it. The other first-floor windows are also three-pane sashes. A decorative band of Coade stone, featuring a guilloche pattern, runs around the building at first-floor level, topped by a cornice. Griffin plaques made of Coade stone are inset into the entrance front. The garden front has two full-height bow windows, each with a single window range between them and a single window on either side. A large, central splayed bay is present on the south side. To the left of the main house is an attached curved screen wall with arched brick panels; one panel contains a six-panel gate.

Detailed Attributes

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