The rebuilding destroyed evidence of an extension to the south, which may originally have been part of an earlier building on the site.
It was grade II* listed in 1958,[1] but it appear on the Heritage at Risk Register due to structural cracks and roof leaks.
The doorway has a moulded surround flanked by halberds, and a decorated lintel.
In the top floor is a three-light stepped mullioned window with a stepped hood mould, and in the left bay upper two floors are vesica-shaped windows.
Some of the window bars retain the fixing wire from which the original, removable, panes of glass were hung.