Latitude: 51.1327 / 51°7'57"N
Longitude: 0.4011 / 0°24'3"E
OS Eastings: 568090
OS Northings: 139787
OS Grid: TQ680397
Mapcode National: GBR NR9.S8J
Mapcode Global: VHJMX.WSWK
Plus Code: 9F324CM2+3C
Entry Name: Marle Place Including Courtyard Wall and Gateway Wall to the North West
Listing Date: 20 October 1954
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1250611
English Heritage Legacy ID: 432464
ID on this website: 101250611
Location: Tunbridge Wells, Kent, TN12
County: Kent
District: Tunbridge Wells
Civil Parish: Brenchley
Traditional County: Kent
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Kent
Church of England Parish: Brenchley All Saints
Church of England Diocese: Rochester
Tagged with: Architectural structure
TQ 63 NE BRENCHLEY MARLE PLACE ROAD
10/153 Marle Place including courtyard
20.10.54 wall and gateway wall to the
north west
GV II
House. Early C17 (porch dated 1619) with some C18 internal refurbishment.
C19 alterations (date of 1858 on rear addition); late C19 conservatory
addition. Framed construction, tile-hung in the C19 with bands of scalloped
tiles; C19 tiled roof with bands of scalloped tiles; brick stacks. Early C20
gateway.
Plan: The house faces north. The early arrangement was a compact 2 room
lobby entrance plan to the main block, the principal rooms heated by back-to-
back fireplaces in an axial stack with a rear centre stair projection. The
position of the original services is not clear,one of the front rooms may have
served as a kitchen or the services may have been sited to the rear where
considerable remodelling has taken place. The stair projection was extended
in 1858, and this may be the date of a more extensive phase of remodelling
although other alterations appear to be late C19/early C20, including a cross
passage broken through the axial stack on the ground floor, extensive window
repair and the Vernacular Revival style cladding of the frame. Late C19
photographs by the local Brenchley photographer, William Hodges, show the
conservatory under construction.
Exterior: 2 storeys, and attic. Symmetrical 3-bay front, 2 gables to the
front with a projecting gabled 2-storey porch in the centre, the gables with
deep eaves, moulded bargeboards, pendants and finials. Fine chimneyshaft to
the axial stack with 4 octagonal clustered shafts with moulded star-shaped
cornices. Fine gabled porch, with an early C17 ovolo-moulded outer doorframe,
the returns of the porch on the ground floor each incorporating a balustrade
of 6 turned balusters. Late C19/early C20 C17 style 6-panel porch door with
elaborately decorated strap hinges. The first floor of the porch has a coved
oriel with a 5-light ovolo-moulded transomed window, the transom with a
cornice. The gabled bays to left and right each have a 2-storey canted bay
with a hipped roof with one first and one ground floor ovolo-moulded mullion
and transomed window, 4-lights to the centre, one to each return; 3-light
mullioned attic windows with square leaded panes. The left (east) return has
2 gables to the east. The ground floor canted bays are late C19/early C20,
the left hand bay with moulded mullioned windows, the right hand bay with
French windows. First and attic floor 3- and 4-light transomed windows with
square leaded panes. The rear elevation is irregular, with 2 rear wings, one
on either side of the stair projection which has been extended in 1858. A
late C19 conservatory with a crested iron ridge adjoins the main block at the
right (west) end. Courtyard wall to the north west with an early C20 gateway
included in the listing.
Interior: Interesting features from a number of different periods. The cross
passage broken through the axial stack has a circa early C20 coved ceiling.
The right hand ground floor room was refurbished in the early C18 with wall
panelling, a bolection-moulded chimney-piece with integral cupboards, a
cornice and decorated plaster ceiling frieze. Fine C17 dog-leg stair with
turned balusters, an open string, moulded handrail and peaked finials. The
stair shows evidence of alteration with flights down to the cellar and to an
open fronted closet off the half landing. The first floor rooms preserve
original C17 high-set ovolo-moulded 3-light windows, blocked externally. The
first floor left hand room has a moulded ceiling beam and exposed joists; the
right hand room has plain ceiling carpentry probably designed to take a
plaster ceiling. Late C19/early C20 panelling survives on both ground and
first floors. Some of the jowled wall posts of the original frame are visible
on the first floor.
Roof: Clasped purlin roof over the main range and stair projection.
Marle Place is a high quality early C17 house with interesting later features.
A reproduction of a late C19 drawing of the house by William Twopeny exists in
the National Monument Record.
Listing NGR: TQ6809039787
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
Other nearby listed buildings