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The Dower House is a detached rectangular plan two-storey ashlar-faced house with a 1717 datestone. [25] Opposite the church, on Todenham Road, is the Old Reading Room, or Church View (listed 1960), an 18th-century dressed limestone semi-detached building with a 1713 datestone, mullioned windows and gable dormers , which was further extended in ...
Foxcote House is an 18th-century detached country house in the village of Ilmington, near Shipston-on-Stour in Warwickshire, England. It has been a Grade II* listed property since September 1952. [1] The house has 11 bedrooms, five bathrooms, with a suite and two dressing rooms. It also has a large hall with a mezzanine gallery.
Asthall Manor is a vernacular two-storey house with attics, built of local Cotswold limestone on an irregular H-plan with mullioned and mullioned-transomed windows and a stone-slated roof typical of the area. There are records of a house on the site since 1272 when Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwall, owned a house on the site worth 12d.
Whiteway Colony is a residential community in the Cotswolds in the parish of Miserden near Stroud, Gloucestershire, United Kingdom.The community was founded in 1898 by Tolstoyans and today has no spare land available with over sixty homes and 120 colonists. [1]
Housing in the United Kingdom represents the largest non-financial asset class in the UK; its overall net value passed the £5 trillion mark in 2014. [1] [needs update] Housing includes modern and traditional styles. About 30% of homes are owned outright by their occupants, and a further 40% are owner-occupied on a mortgage.
The Cotswold style of architecture is a style based on houses from the Cotswold region of England. Cotswold houses often have a prominent chimney, often near the front door of the house. [1] Other notable features include king mullions and steep roofs. The Cotswold style uses local materials based on geology.
This category relates to the Cotswold Hills in Gloucestershire, England, which extend into the adjoining counties of Oxfordshire, Somerset, Warwickshire, Wiltshire and Worcestershire. For the district of Cotswold in Gloucestershire, see Category:Cotswold District .
Ampney Crucis is a village and civil parish in the Cotswolds, part of the Cotswold District of Gloucestershire, England. The village is in the Ampney-Coln electoral ward. This ward stretches from Ampney Crucis to Coln St. Dennis in the north. The total population of the ward at the 2011 census was 1,884. [1] [2]