Listed Building record TQ 74 NW 151 - THE GLASS HOUSE, Yalding

Summary

Grade II listed building. Main construction periods 1603 to 1987

Location

Grid reference TQ 7055 4826 (point)
Map sheet TQ74NW
Civil Parish COLLIER STREET, MAIDSTONE, KENT
County KENT
District MAIDSTONE, KENT

Map

Type and Period (1)

Full Description

The following text is from the original listed building designation:
YALDING BENOVER ROAD TQ 74 NW (north-east side) 4/48 The Glass House 25-7-52 GV II
House. Dated 1603 (J. Newman, West Kent and the Weald, 1980), restored mid-to-late C20. Timber framed. Ground floor close-studded with rendered infilling, first floor tile-hung to front, close-studded to gable ends. Plain tile roof. 2 storeys and garret. Rendered plinth. Continuous jetty with moulded bressumer supported at each end on carved scrolled bracket. Eaves jettied to gable ends on similarly-moulded bressumers and brackets. Half-hipped roof. Red and grey brick stack in front slope of roof towards centre, with brick string towards base and top, line suggesting fillet to front, and with another rectangular flue to each side, set at an angle. Irregular fenestration of 3 ovolo-moulded wood mullioned windows; one four-light towards each end and one two-light under stack. Ground floor has two C17 two-light ovolo-moulded mullion frieze windows to left and two to right, each pair formerly flanking a deeper window for which only mortices remain. Deep left window area subsequently partly filled with six-pane sash, right area with four-light leaded wood mullion window. Brick patch under each cill. Each gable end has four-light ovolo-moulded mullion attic window with diamond subsidiary mullions, in moulded architrave. Left gable end has six-light ovolo-moulded mullion first-floor window with diamond subsidiary mullions, and similar window to ground floor. Right gable end has ten-light mullioned and transomed first floor oriel window with subsidiary mullions, two-light side-lights, multiply-moulded sides and head, and coved plastered soffit. Similar oriel window to ground floor, with ovolo-moulded mullion frieze windows, later brick pier under one end and small gable with plain-tile roof. Ribbed door in squared moulded architrave under stack. Timber-framed rear lean-to, clad with patched brickwork, extending slightly further to right and left than main range, and with clasped purlin visible in left gable end. Interior not inspected. Said to derive its name from a formerly virtually continuous row of first- floor oriel windows along front elevation, with eaves of main roof jettied or continued down over them. Said to be dated 1603 internally. Illustrated in 1867 without front oriels (K. Gravett, Timber and Brick Building in Kent, 1981 edn. p.38).
Listing NGR: TQ7055048262


English Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest (Map). SKE16160.

Sources/Archives (1)

  • --- Map: English Heritage. List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest.

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Record last edited

Dec 3 2012 11:46AM