The Vicarage is a Grade II listed building in the Wrexham local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 16 November 1962. House.

The Vicarage

WRENN ID
heavy-pilaster-rye
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Wrexham
Country
Wales
Date first listed
16 November 1962
Type
House
Source
Cadw listing

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Description

The Vicarage is a Georgian house built in the 18th century, featuring 2½ storeys and three windows. Constructed of brick, it has a slate roof with dentil eaves and coped gables, along with brick end stacks that were partly rebuilt and reduced in height in the 20th century. The central entrance boasts a doorcase with a cornice on consoles, panel reveals, and a panel door. The windows are segmental-headed 2-light casements with transoms, which were inserted in the 20th century into the original openings. On the right gable end, there are windows on the left side in each storey, both of which are 16-pane hornless sashes under earlier and narrower segmental heads.

To the left gable end, there is a 1-storey 20th-century extension that replaced an earlier coach house; it features a 2-light window similar to those on the main range and has dentil eaves. The rear elevation has three windows and projecting eaves, with an original 2-storey canted bay window on the left side. This bay window includes a 2-light lower-storey window and a 16-pane first-floor window, both replacing earlier French doors, with the first-floor window previously opening to a balcony. The central lower storey is painted white and formerly opened to a lean-to conservatory; it has a glazed door surrounded by Tuscan pilasters and a round-headed niche to the left. The first floor has a 16-pane hornless sash window that lights the stair, while the attic features 8-pane hornless sash windows. On the right side, there is a 2-storey flat-roof projection with a 4-light floor-length window in the lower storey and a 16-pane horned sash window above, which replaced earlier French doors.

The house has a double-depth plan with a central entrance hall and a stair at the rear. The full-height open-well stair has turned balusters and square newels. In the lower storey, the left-hand room at the front contains a spine beam with an ogee stop. On the first floor, the rooms on the left side also feature spine beams. Beneath the stair, there is a boarded door leading to brick steps that descend to the brick-lined cellar.

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