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76, High Street

A Grade II Listed Building in Ingatestone, Essex

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.6713 / 51°40'16"N

Longitude: 0.3858 / 0°23'8"E

OS Eastings: 565072

OS Northings: 199641

OS Grid: TQ650996

Mapcode National: GBR NJW.2CX

Mapcode Global: VHJKD.M8T4

Plus Code: 9F32M9CP+G8

Entry Name: 76, High Street

Listing Date: 9 December 1994

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1197298

English Heritage Legacy ID: 373669

ID on this website: 101197298

Location: Ingatestone, Brentwood, Essex, CM4

County: Essex

District: Brentwood

Civil Parish: Ingatestone and Fryerning

Built-Up Area: Ingatestone

Traditional County: Essex

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Essex

Church of England Parish: Ingatestone St Edmund and St Mary

Church of England Diocese: Chelmsford

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Description


INGATESTONE AND FRYERNING
TQ6599
723-1/14/385
HIGH STREET,Ingatestone (North West side)
Nos.76

GV II

House, now 2 shops and house. C15 or earlier, altered in C18, extended in C19
and C20. Timber-framed, plastered and weatherboarded, roofed with concrete
tiles and handmade red clay tiles; partly of brick, roofed with slate. Short
hall range facing SE with C16 internal stack near left end in front of axis;
2-bay cross-wing to left, with C20 single-storey wing to rear. 3-bay cross-
wing to right, and C15 or earlier 2-bay wing obliquely to rear left of it, following the shape of the site, jettied to the left, with an internal stack against the right wall. C20 single-storey extension between these rear wings, with flat roof. To left of the left cross-wing is a mid-C19 house of stock bricks, roofed with slate, with 2 stacks at right. C19 singie-storey lean-to
to rear, and C20 conservatory/porch to rear of that. Two storeys. The ground floor of the main building comprises 2 shops each with a central glazed door,
and matching fascias across the 2 on paired consoles, early C20; the left
window of the right shop is blocked. The first floor has a facade of painted brick, above the left shop are 2 early C19 sashes of 6+6 lights, reaching the eaves; above the right shop are 2 similar sashes set lower, with segmental
brick arches. The roof has a gable hip at right, a plain hip at left; shaft
of stack rebuilt in C19. To left is an attached house with a facade of
painted brick, and one mid-C19 sash of 3+3 lights on each floor, the lower
with a segmental brick arch. The left return is cement rendered above a brick plinth, with a 4-panel door and plain overlight (numbered No. 76); hipped
slate roof. The right return of the main range, and the right side of the
rear right wing are weatherboarded, with C20 brickwork against the stack; original wide rafters and shaped sprockets visible 'below eaves; below the
jetty of this wing one plain solid bracket O.14m wide is visible, original;
most of the jetty is obstructed by the C20 extension; this wing has a gabled
roof of handmade red clay tiles. The rear elevation of it has on the ground
floor one early C19 tripartite sash, altered, and on the first floor one
early C19 sash of 8+8 lights.
INTERIOR: the ground floor is much altered for use as C20 shops, all
surfaces plastered or boarded, beams boxed, all internal partitions removed.
The first floor of the left cross-wing (occupied residentially) has
chamfered wallplates and a chamfered and cambered tie-beam, all with step
stops;one early C19 semi-elliptical arch over a door. The first floor of the right cross-wing has studs approximately 0.40m apart, and an edge-halved and bridled scarf in the left wallplate; one wide curved brace trenched inside
the studs of the rear wall; both internal tie-beams missing; ceiled to
collars at half-height. The first floor of the main range has C18 pine
panelling, incomplete, and a complete C18 moulded wooden cornice; C18 2-
panel pine door. The upper storey of the rear right wing has some wide
hardwood floorboards, butt-edged. Most of the surfaces are plastered, but
in the left wall 3 studs 0.22m wide are visible, and in the middle of the
rear wall a post 0.30m wide. The substantial sizes of these elements, and
of the one exposed jetty bracket, suggest a timber-framed structure of high quality and early date. The roofs are difficult to access, not inspected,
but it is predictable that the left cross-wing originally had a crownpost
roof, now altered to the present roof on a left-right axis, and that the
roof of the right cross-wing has been altered to side-purlin form. The main
range may have been raised, in which case it will have a roof of the C17 or
C18. An original roof is likely in the rear right wing. Chimneys now faced
with hardboard may have hearths or grates of architectural value.


Listing NGR: TQ6507299641

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