With its distinctive Mansard roof, this is a typical Winchcombe house. From its façade it appears to be Georgian but hidden behind is a much older house. Earlier features include Elizabethan archways with keystones and imposts in the basement, and foundations stones salvaged from Winchombe’s Benedictine Abbey, which was destroyed in 1539. The back garden, which sits on the River Isborne, has an 18th-century grotto complete with stalactites.