The eastern half consisted of a three-storied, two-bay range jettied towards the street, with a contemporary hall wing to the north, the whole appearance of the later 15th century.
The upper story was built above an elaborately moulded bressummer, supported by arched brackets, and there is a waist rail corresponding in height and in decorative detail in the east wall of the hall.
A chimney-stack at the north end and an upper floor with richly moulded joists were inserted in the earlier 16th century.
An ovolo moulding cut from the solid runs from each face of the tie beams and along the upper edge of the wall plates.
Riven lath filling in the internal trusses may represent an early division of the wing into separate lodgings.