This building dates to 1335. It is the 2nd oldest cruck house dated in Hampshire, with 1 Summerset Cottage being the oldest at 1311. A hall of two equal bays survives largely intact. The hall roof has evidence for a louvre in one bay. If, as seems to be usual in Hampshire, this indicates the low end, then the fragmentary end bay was the service bay. The former parlour bay is evidenced by mortices for wind braces in what is now an external wall; it is illustrated in an early-twentieth-century drawing. The hall crucks have chamfered arch-braces and collar beams. The truss at the high end is of type F1 construction and that at the low end is a variant of type F1 with a king post tenoned into the tie beam and halved over the collar. Wind braces are straight and about 4 ins square in section.