Low Grange is a Grade II listed building in the North Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 13 November 1987. Farmhouse. 1 related planning application.

Low Grange

WRENN ID
forgotten-plaster-vetch
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North Yorkshire
Country
England
Date first listed
13 November 1987
Type
Farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Low Grange is a farmhouse, originally dating from the mid-18th century. It has been divided into two separate dwellings. The main house is constructed of red brick with brick and ashlar dressings, a Welsh slate roof, and a pantile roof to a lower wing. The main part of the house is two storeys and three bays wide. It features a central half-glazed door with a rusticated quoined surround, a keystone, and a plain overlight. The windows are 16-pane sashes with stone sills, set within flat brick arches with ashlar keystones. There is an ashlar eaves band, cornice, and a 19th-century balustraded parapet with moulded coping. Stone coping and end stacks are also present. The rear of the house has a round-arched stair window. The lower right wing is two storeys and four bays wide, with two 20th-century glazed doors set within flat brick arches with ashlar keystones. To the right is a blocked window, similarly treated, and a small 2-pane window. The first floor has four 4-pane casements with stone sills, and dentilled eaves. The interior of the main house includes a dogleg staircase with turned knopped balusters. Upstairs, there are two late 18th-century fire surrounds and grates. A left ground-floor room features cupboards flanking the fireplace, which has fluted surrounds, with Gothick glazed doors to the right cupboard.

Detailed Attributes

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