Listed Building record TQ 64 SE 36 - LITTLE CRITTENDEN
Summary
Location
| Grid reference | TQ 6563 4337 (point) | 
|---|---|
| Map sheet | TQ64SE | 
| District | TUNBRIDGE WELLS, KENT | 
| Civil Parish | PADDOCK WOOD, TUNBRIDGE WELLS, KENT | 
Map
Type and Period (1)
Full Description
The following text is from the original listed building designation:
TQ 64 SE                PADDOCK WOOD      CRITTENDEN ROAD
6/325                                     Little Crittenden
II                                                                                                                                                       House.  Circa mid C15 origins, re-roofed and extended following a fire in 1937.  The main block is framed construction, the ground floor underbuilt in brick; peg-tile roof replacing thatch (photograph in the possession of the owner); brick stack.  1937 addition brick with a peg-tile roof.
Plan:  The house faces north and is set back from the road.  The medieval block appears to have been a 2-cell plan; a 2-bay hall to the right (west) with a probably storeyed one-bay block at the left (east) end and a putative cross passage between, into which the stack was inserted when the hall was floored in the circa early C17, converting the house to a lobby entrance arrangement.  Evidence of a former stair in the hall, rising against the front wall.  The fire of 1937 destroyed the roof construction above tie-beam level and burnt out the floors.  When the house was repaired a rear left (south east) wing was added in a sympathetic style.
Exterior:  2 storeys.  Roof half-hipped at left end; hipped at right end where it is carried down as a catslide to a west end outshut.  Axial stack with staggered shafts and a corbelled brick cornice.  Asymmetrical 3-window front. The ground floor is painted white.  The framing above the middle rail is widely-spaced and includes tension braces.  Windows 1930s iron casements with square leaded panes.  1930s door to the left with a one-light window alongside at the far left.  3-light casement in the centre, lighting the hall with a second 1930s door alongside to the right.  2-light timber casement to the outshut.  3 first floor casements, the 2 lighting the chamber over the hall paired.  The 1930s wing has a half-hipped roof, small-pane timber casements and is gabled to the east with a stack on the east side.
Interior:  The ground floor of the main block preserves exposed ceiling beams, the hall fireplace with a chamfered lintel and brick jambs.  The wall framing has jowled wall posts.  The arch-braced hall tie-beam survives, the crown post and rafters destroyed in the 1937 fire.  The west end of the chamber over the hall includes a former window frame with shutter grooves for sliding shutters. The first floor left hand room has evidence of former mullioned windows with diagonally-set mullions, one to the front and one to the rear wall.  The 1930s carpentry is in a sturdy Arts and Crafts tradition and includes a stair with a facetted finial and well-made plank doors.
Listing NGR: TQ6784344787
English Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest (Map). SKE16160.
Sources/Archives (1)
- --- SKE16160 Map: English Heritage. List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest.
Finds (0)
Protected Status/Designation
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Record last edited
Feb 19 2008 12:26PM