Grange Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the Buckinghamshire local planning authority area, England. A C17 House. 1 related planning application.
Grange Farmhouse
- WRENN ID
- knotted-parapet-gold
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Buckinghamshire
- Country
- England
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Grange Farmhouse is a house dating to 1629, built for William Elmer, as indicated by the initials "W.E." on a plaque above the porch window. It is constructed with whitewashed rubble stone to the ground floor and return walls of the side wing, and timber framing to the first floor, with jetties to the front. The roof is tiled, with decorative bargeboards and cross finials to the gables, and central chimneys. The house is arranged in an L-shape, with a side wing projecting to the right.
The main wing has three bays. There are three-light leaded casement windows in the outer bays and first floor of the side wing gable end. The ground floor windows have timber lintels, and a lower window is flanked by small rectangular recesses with timber lintels. The central bay features a two-storey timber-framed gabled porch, with a jetty on three sides, supported by dragon beams. The ground floor of the porch is open to the front and part of the left side, the remainder being enclosed with heavy turned wooden balusters and brick infill. A small three-light leaded oriel window sits on a bracket above the porch, displaying the date plaque. Stop-chamfered door frames are present. There is a hipped, single-storey extension to the left of the main wing, and a lean-to to the rear.
Detailed Attributes
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