Wrentham is a village on the A12 about nine miles south-west of Lowestoft, and it's a place that retains a genuine rural Suffolk character with a working agricultural hinterland. The housing stock includes a core of older brick and pantile cottages around the church, some larger Victorian farmhouses and former farm buildings, and a ring of post-war and modern development along the main road. Pantile roofs — which are traditional to this part of Suffolk and Norfolk — need specific knowledge when it comes to repairs, particularly sourcing matching reclaimed tiles, and we have experience with this. Wrentham is close enough to the coast that wind-driven rain is still a factor, even though it's set back a couple of miles from the sea.
Wrentham is a village on the A12 about nine miles south-west of Lowestoft, and it's a place that retains a genuine rural Suffolk character with a working agricultural hinterland. The housing stock includes a core of older brick and pantile cottages around the church, some larger Victorian farmhouses and former farm buildings, and a ring of post-war and modern development along the main road. Pantile roofs — which are traditional to this part of Suffolk and Norfolk — need specific knowledge when it comes to repairs, particularly sourcing matching reclaimed tiles, and we have experience with this. Wrentham is close enough to the coast that wind-driven rain is still a factor, even though it's set back a couple of miles from the sea.
Wrentham sits on the A12 trunk road, historically making it a coaching and trading point between Lowestoft and Ipswich, and the village still has a notably mixed character with working farms and rural businesses alongside residential properties.
Traditional Suffolk brick and pantile cottages near the village centre, alongside farmhouses, former agricultural buildings, and post-war estate development along the A12 corridor.
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Storm damage, active leak, damaged ridge — we aim to be on-site within 24 hours.