Early C20 designed landscape south of the house, running down in an open lawn flanked by shelter belts to an irregular octagonal pond framed by low walls, with gate piers and wrought ironwork gates. Mature trees on north side form a shelter belt, date from 1936.
- Associated Buildings
Sulis Manor (architect Samuel Sebastian Reay) is one of a group of late Arts & Crafts houses built for Bath businessmen to the south of the city, instigated by Charles Annesley Voysey’s Lodge Style on Shaft Road, designed in 1909 for the surveyor and engineer, Thomas Sturge Cotterell Sulis Manor was built for Isaac Carr of Twerton Mills.
- Planning History
Tree Preservation Order confirmed by the Council on 17 February 2015, protects all the groups of deciduous and evergreen trees in the Sulis Manor grounds.