The parsonage is located next to the church and was built around 1776 to replace the parsonage that was destroyed by fire in 1635. The building is designed as a traditional double house with two stories. It is constructed of brick with Gobertange plinths, regular corner chains, and frames.
Typical of the parsonage style from this period is the balanced symmetrical structure, emphasised by large windows in a beautifully profiled, rectangular frame with a keystone and a rectangular door with a fanlight in a similar frame with a drip moulding.
Inside, we see a wide transverse corridor with four connecting rooms. During a renovation in the mid-1970s, several striking elements disappeared, but a remarkable number of classicist features were nevertheless preserved, such as the molded stucco ceilings and four stucco chimney breasts with matching wooden mantels.
Also noteworthy are the recessed baluster staircase and the beautifully carved cellar door. The upper floor, in addition to the plainly profiled stucco ceilings, also contains several original doors. Most of the paneled doors in the house are likely 19th-century.
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