Vicarage And Attached Kitchen-Yard Walls is a Grade II listed building in the North Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 December 1987. A Victorian Vicarage. 1 related planning application.

Vicarage And Attached Kitchen-Yard Walls

WRENN ID
lone-postern-amber
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North Yorkshire
Country
England
Date first listed
14 December 1987
Type
Vicarage
Period
Victorian
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: sale history · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

The Vicarage, built in 1873 by G E Street, is a red brick building with the front in English bond and the rest in English garden wall bond, featuring sandstone mullions and dressings. It has a tile roof with some rebuilt brick stacks. The attached kitchen-yard walls are made of red brick in English garden wall bond and have sandstone coping.

The entrance front is one storey and an attic with three bays. The two right bays are gabled, and the right end bay projects. There are half-glazed double doors in the centre bay, set in a pointed doorway with a hoodmould. To the left, there is a three-light window beneath a relieving arch. The right bay features a four-light square bay window on a chamfered plinth, topped with a moulded cornice and a plain parapet with chamfered coping. Above the door, there is a single light window, and above the bay window, there is a three-light window, both beneath relieving arches. A moulded band runs along the first floor, stepping over the bay window. All windows are mullioned, and all openings are quoined and chamfered, with coped tumbled-brick gables.

The garden front mirrors the entrance front in its one storey and attic structure and three-bay arrangement. The ground-floor windows consist of two, three, and four lights from the left end, while the first floor has two three-light windows. The eaves are bracketed, and there are rebuilt stacks at the left-of-centre and right end. The rear features three parallel tumbled-brick gabled wings, two of which have end stacks. The original stacks have shaped panelled sides and dentilled cornices. The left return of the left wing includes a staircase window with paired trefoil-headed lights.

Inside, all fittings remain intact except for those in the kitchen. The kitchen-yard walls are approximately 1.75 metres high, stepped over gateways at the house end, and have sloped coping.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 1 transaction since 2003
  • Related listed building consents — 1 application
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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