User:Brookie/sandbox/Hazelrigg House

Hazelrigg House is a Grade II listed sandstone house of of 2½ storeys built house in Northampton.

It is not known exactly when the building was built, but an examination of the building's roof trusses suggests that the property dates from the early 16th Century and it is one of the few houses to escape the "Great Fire of Northampton" in September 1675, when only a part of it was destroyed.

The property has a tiled roof and has three gables; the house as built was originally wider, with five rather the current three gables which were added in the 17th century, probably at the same time that the front of the house was remodelled; an extension was also added at the rear. This rebuilding may have been made in addition to the repairs after its partial damage caused by the Great Fire.

The property was divided into three separate houses sometime in the 19th century, and subsequently (sometime before 1886) reduced in width from 5 gables to the present 3 gables when part was demolished.

The house stayed in the Hazelrigg familey until 1831. After this, the new owner let the property. In 1913 the Northamptonshire Ladies Club purchased the House to use as its meeting place, sharing it with the local Women's Institute branch as well as the Northanmptonshire Architectural & Archaeological Society. In the early 1960's it was acquired by the national architects practice of Marshman Warren Taylor who remained there until the late 1970s. After this the building sat empty for most of the 1980s, by which time it had been acquired by Northampton Borough Council. In 1989 it was refurbished by its tenant, another firm of architects. In 1994 English Heritage became the tenant who stayed there until 2004; since then the property has been occupied by a succession of children’s nurseries.