[2][1] The house is set over three storeys with distinctive tall chimney stacks with its architectural style described as "Cotswold vernacular Jacobean" by the NHLE listing and as a 'Jacobean manor house' by Nikolaus Pevsner.
The central bay of the house projects forward to form a porch with a round arched entrance, a sculptured heraldic tablet is sited above the porch.
A sculpture of the Virgin and child sits as an aedicule above the window on the first floor.
[3] The house originally had extensive terraced gardens, these were subsequently built on in the 20th century.
[4] A series of photos of the gardens when first laid out were taken by the architect Michael Bunney and the prints form part of the Bunney Collection in the Historic England Archive in Swindon.