Background information:
Detached building with barn built around 1900. Then standing in the outskirts of Boxtel. As often happened in Brabant at the time, it was built with limited resources. In the countryside people were usually not that rich.
The house has one floor, and an attic underneath the gable roof, which is provided with skylights. The house has a so called upstairs room with a cellar underneath. Attached is a scullery with chimney, where scars in the rear wall reveal that something previously stood behind this construction. The detached barn has a dormer, but of poor quality.
The actual building is less than 50 meters away from the Tilburg-Boxtel railway.
Architectural details:
The saddle roof with triangle end at the front, has dark gray old-Dutch pans. At the bottom of the triangle end there is a beautifully carved, largely wooden gutter. In the middle of the main roof there is a chimney that has been renewed.
The façades are made of reddish-brown stones in cross-linking. Most of the window frames on the ground floor are equipped with wooden shutters. The segment arches above the frames give the house some extra prestige. The cellar window is equipped with thief irons.
Striking detail is the gray plastered plinth that is only present on the façade.