Exterior
South Range
The south elevation is built of thin brown rubble in a white-flecked pink loam matrix. The central section is set back between a pair of short gabled wings and has two bays of different sized windows on three floors. These are all of ovolo-moulded mullioned type with returned hood moulds and appear to be 20th century replacements. Relieving arches to the four lower indicate that there were originals in the same position. Set hard against the western wing there is an archway to an angled cross passage. This is of late medieval type with a double ogee moulding and a four-centred head, reset in this position and seeming to cut the relieving arch of the adjoining window.
The western wing has a two-light window with a relieving arch at each level. These are of ovolo-moulded type; the top is original and the other are 20th century. On the ground floor a large lead cistern is set against the wall with a coat of arms and the initials CK 1713. In the eastern return there is a modern window and a door with a four-centred head, possibly inserted into the wall. The south-west corner of the gable is abutted by a short length of rubble wall incorporating a four-centred doorway of indeterminate date. This is abutted in turn by the brickwork of the adjoining south-western range.