Whitehouse is a Grade II listed building in the Monmouthshire local planning authority area, Wales. First listed on 15 March 2000. House.
Whitehouse
- WRENN ID
- sombre-pavement-holly
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Monmouthshire
- Country
- Wales
- Date first listed
- 15 March 2000
- Type
- House
- Source
- Cadw listing
Description
Whitehouse is a house constructed from whitewashed rubble stone, featuring slate roofs. It has a brick and stone axial stack at the west gable end of the north crosswing, a brick stack on the chimney gable at the rear of the north crosswing, and a slightly lower ridge on the southeast wing. There is a 20th-century external stack at the south end of the southeast wing. The building is two storeys and an attic in an L-plan configuration, with the entrance located at the left end of the southeast range.
The southeast range includes a 20th-century lean-to porch on the left, a pair of casement windows on the right, and a small pair of casement windows above. The adjoining east gable of the north crosswing features a small pair of casement windows in the gable, a pair of casement windows on the first floor to the left in a chamfered oak frame of a two-light mullion window, and a door with a pair of casement windows with top-lights on the ground floor.
On the north side, there is a pair of casement windows on the ground floor to the right and an altered six-light timber mullion window on the first floor to the left, now reduced to four lights with casements replacing the last two. The west gable end has a small pair of casement windows on the first floor to the left above an oak chamfered window with four diamond mullions, and a small stair light to the right. The west rear of the north range features a 20th-century window on the first floor to the left and two pairs of casement windows below. The south gable end has a 20th-century ground floor window and a pair of casement windows on the first floor, both located to the left of the added stack.
Inside, the southeast range consists of one room with an entrance passage at the south gable, while the north range also has one room, which was formerly divided by a partition, with stairs at the west end. The southeast range contains two ceiling beams, and the post-and-panel partition shown in Fox and Raglan has been removed. There is a stone lintel over the fireplace with chamfered stone jambs, and a Tudor-arched doorway leads into the crosswing. The north room features four large beams and an end fireplace, with stairs located to the left of the fireplace. The treads have been renewed, and the landing has two oak Tudor-arched doors, one leading to the attic stairs, which have solid oak treads. Post-and-panel partitions are arranged to create distinct spaces.
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