9, Station Road is a Grade II listed building in the North Northamptonshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 19 June 1992. House. 4 related planning applications.

9, Station Road

WRENN ID
ghost-brick-tide
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North Northamptonshire
Country
England
Date first listed
19 June 1992
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

This is a house, likely dating from the 17th century, and significantly altered since. It retains reused medieval windows, adding to its historical interest. The exterior is constructed of coursed limestone rubble, with some ironstone quoins, and has a 20th-century interlocking concrete tile roof, brick ridge, and end stacks.

The front of the house has a central 20th-century door, with two 20th-century windows to the left and one to the right at ground floor level, all with wooden lintels. The rear elevation is more remarkable, displaying four reused windows, probably from the 15th century. Two are located on the ground floor, flanking a doorway in a chamfered opening with a wooden lintel, and a chamfered fire window, which is now blocked, is positioned to the right. Two further windows are on the first floor, flanking a 19th-century sash window with a wooden lintel. The first-floor windows feature four originally cusped lights in a square surround, with straight-sided blind panels above each light. The ground-floor windows, originally of two cusped lights in a square surround, have been subdivided by chamfered mullions to create four lights; the cusping remains inside the left-hand window, but is hidden in the right-hand window. Stumps of original secondary mullions rising from the head of each light suggest that the present ground floor windows originally had an upper part of four lights, and that each pair of ground and first floor windows may have initially formed a single unit. The internal face of each window is plain, except for a raised central fillet.

Detailed Attributes

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