Old Manor Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the Buckinghamshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 6 July 1984. House. 17 related planning applications.

Old Manor Farmhouse

WRENN ID
endless-rampart-coral
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Buckinghamshire
Country
England
Date first listed
6 July 1984
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Old Manor Farmhouse is a 17th-century house, possibly originally a T-plan design with fragments of timber frame. It was largely refronted in the 19th century, with a parallel range added to the north and a mid-18th-century cross wing to the west. The house is constructed of brick, with old tile roofs and brick chimneys. It has three storeys and an attic, and is four bays wide. The north front has three bays of checked brick, with a moulded plinth and eaves. The gabled bay to the right is of red and vitreous brick with red quoins, window surrounds, a moulded plinth, and plain band courses at the first and second floor levels. Windows are mostly 19th-century wooden casements, with three lights on the ground floor right and first floor, and two lights in the attic of the right bay. The ground floor of the left bays has irregular openings, including 20th-century French doors, paired and single casements, and a 6-panelled door within a 19th-century wooden doorcase with an architrave frame, panelled frieze and cornice hood with dentils. A two-storey range, attached at a right angle to the northeast corner, dates to the mid-19th century, and was built in 1864, formerly used as outbuildings, but now part of the house. The interior of the original block contains a 17th-century moulded spine beam with run-out stops.

Detailed Attributes

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