There are stone bands between the storeys, quoins on the corners, and at the top of the house is a cornice and a parapet.
[4][5] There is a central doorcase with engaged fluted Ionic columns and an open pediment with scrolls and, in the seventh bay, there is a projecting porch.
[4] Inside the house are two Jacobean staircases with turned balusters and square newels surmounted by ball finials.
The entrance has flush quoins and a plain lintel inscribed with the date 1663 and the initials "EG" (for Edward Glegg).
[7] Hartwell et al in the Buildings of England series describe the southwest front as "handsome".