The public house is in two parts, both with tile roofs. The older part is timber framed and has two storeys and an attic, an L-shaped plan with a front range, a cross-wing, a porch in the angle, and two parallel rear wings. On the front are three bays, a full-height gabled porch with jettied upper floors, balusters under the attic window, and an inscribed bressumer and a rail. The later part to the left was built in about 1700, it is in red brick with quoins, and a copedparapet ramped down at the ends. There are three storeys and two bays, and the windows are casements with raised keystones and aprons.[2][3]
The lodge is roughcast and has a pyramidal tile roof. There is one storey, a square plan, two bays, and a later flat-roofed extension to the left. The doorway in the lean-to porch has an ogee-headed fanlight, and the windows are casements with Gothictracery.[4]
A small country house in Tudor Gothic style, it is rendered with a first floor corniceband, an embattledparapet, and a hippedslate roof. There are two storeys and a west front of seven bays, the middle three bays having a two-storey bowed projection, and octagonal corner turrets with embattled and domed pinnacles. The south front has four bays and contains a doorway with a Tudor arch and panelled spandrels, flanked by octagonal piers with domed pinnacles, and above it is an embattled cornice. The windows are transomed and have two lights with Tudor-arched heads, and above them is a Tudor hood mould. There is a service wing recessed to the right with three bays and sash windows.[5][6]