Painswick House

[3][5] Around 1830 the house was extended by George Basevi adding the east and west wings.

Robins's painting allowed the garden to be restored in the 1990s under the direction of Painswick's owner, Lord Dickinson, who inherited the house in 1955.

[3][9] It includes woodland, flower and vegetable plots, garden buildings and a maze.

The nine-bay front has a central door set in an Ionic porch with a pediment.

The interior of the building has many original fireplaces and makes extensive use of friezes for decoration.

Painswick House
Painswick Rococo Garden, Thomas Robins the Elder , 1748.