Old Vicarage is a Grade II listed building in the North Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 14 December 1987. House. 5 related planning applications.

Old Vicarage

WRENN ID
nether-wall-khaki
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North Yorkshire
Country
England
Date first listed
14 December 1987
Type
House
Source
Historic England listing

Description

The Old Vicarage is a late 18th-century house with a 19th-century alteration and extension. It is constructed of dressed sandstone with flush quoins, featuring a renewed pantile roof and brick stacks, two of which have been rebuilt. The main house is two storeys high with a four-window front, and is adjoined by a one-storey, two-window service extension on the right. A six-panel door is set within an added gabled porch, positioned slightly to the left of the centre. A blocked doorway with a timber lintel is located centrally to the right of the porch. The ground floor windows are 16-pane sashes to the left of the porch and at the right end; the other ground-floor windows contain unequal 15-pane sashes. The first-floor windows are all 12-pane sashes. All openings are topped with long, tooled keyblock lintels and have stone sills. A stepped eaves course is present, along with coped gables and shaped kneelers. The house has end and centre stacks. The interior features panelled window reveals. A first-floor room located right of centre retains an 18th-century stone chimney-piece with a moulded timber shelf and a built-in cupboard with a fielded panelled door on H-L hinges. The service extension is not considered to be of particular architectural interest.

Detailed Attributes

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