Sandywell Park, English country house in Andoversford, Great Britain
Sandywell Park is a country house blending Jacobean and Georgian style, with a balanced facade featuring five windows in the center and three-storey wings on each side. Original features include twelve-pane sashes on the ground floor and nine-pane windows in the upper levels.
Henry Brett commissioned this house in 1704, and about 20 years later Sir Francis Seymour-Conway added the wings that shape its appearance today. These expansions reflected changing needs and fashions in country house design.
The name reflects the sandy ground and natural springs once found on these lands. Inside, the rooms display period details that show how the household was organized and decorated during the 18th century.
The building is a protected historic structure with limited public access, so check in advance if visits are possible and what conditions apply. The site is located in the Cotswolds, which has good roads and nearby villages for amenities.
A cast iron fireback dated 1630 is still visible in one of the house's fireplaces, predating the current building by decades. This fragment suggests that an earlier structure occupied the same location.
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