Hutton House is a Grade II listed building in the North Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 8 May 1989. House. 7 related planning applications.
Hutton House
- WRENN ID
- solemn-doorway-hyssop
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- North Yorkshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 8 May 1989
- Type
- House
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Hutton House is a large house dating from the 18th century, with additions and alterations made in the early-to-mid and late 19th centuries, now divided into two separate residences. The north block was originally built with red brick in a Flemish bond pattern, featuring grey brick headers and stone dressings. A tower, likely constructed in the early-to-mid 19th century, is rendered with a pebbledash finish. A recessed north section includes a garage, built with red brick in an English garden wall bond pattern. The south block, added in the late 19th century, is built with pinkish brick, along with ashlar and light red brick dressings. The roofs are slate, with the southern roof graduated in tiers and featuring stone copings, brick stacks, and pantiles on a north extension.
The south block (No 1) is two storeys high, with four and two windows facing the street. The right-hand side has been canted back to align with the street line. A stone porch, adorned with a scalloped parapet, contains a glazed door and sidelights set beneath elliptical arches. The sash windows have patterned upper glazing and sit within chamfered surrounds with stone lintels and cills. There are three brick ridge stacks, stepped and corniced with stone.
The north block (No 2) is two storeys high, with two bays and a three-storey tower set back. A section to the far left is lower, set further back, and covers two storeys with two wide bays. A porch provides access to a half-glazed door with a narrow sidelight, typical of the early 19th century; other windows are eight-pane sashes.
The main house features quoins and a first-floor band. Gauged flat brick arches with keystones are present above replaced glazing-bar sashes. Stone gable copings and a stone-corniced stack are located at the right end. The tower has alternating-block quoins, window surrounds, a ground-floor cornice, a battlemented parapet, and a turret chimney. The north extension features a 20th-century door with a glazed panel, a wide modern garage opening, and three sixteen-pane sashes.
Detailed Attributes
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