Group Of Farmbuildings On North Side Of Road, And Walls Attached is a Grade II listed building in the Northumberland local planning authority area, England. First listed on 24 May 1988. Farm buildings.
Group Of Farmbuildings On North Side Of Road, And Walls Attached
- WRENN ID
- crooked-jade-plover
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Northumberland
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 24 May 1988
- Type
- Farm buildings
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This group of farm buildings, located on the north side of the road, dates from around 1840 to 1850 and includes a late 18th-century barn in the eastern range. The buildings are constructed from squared rubble with tooled-and-margined quoins and dressings on the 19th-century sections, and they feature Welsh slate roofs, except for the older barn which has stone slates. The ranges are arranged around a yard that opens to the south, with the main barn extending back from the center of the northern range.
The north range consists of one and two storeys and is symmetrical with one, two, one, two, and one bays. The center features a tall round-headed arch with six-pane loft windows on each side, and the gables are coped. The lower flanking sections each have a pair of segmental arches with three part-slatted windows above, also with coped gables. The single-storey end bays have segmental arches. The eastern range is divided into two parts: the single-storey section to the north has a boarded door and a blocked doorway in alternating-block surrounds. The 18th-century barn to the south has a similar doorway with a boarded door and a 12-pane Yorkshire sash window above in the loft, along with raised reverse-stepped gable coping. The right return of the barn shows a stone stair leading to a boarded door.
The single-storey west range features three doorways with alternating-block surrounds and three part-slatted windows. The walls have arched coping and monolith jambs for gateways, which originally enclosed separate yards in front of the three central parts of the north range; the western part was later extended to include the west range.
The rear elevation of the north range displays a projecting barn with nine vents in the gable end, each consisting of a chamfered square opening that holds a circular iron plate with radial ventilation slits. The left return of the barn shows the roofline of a demolished gingang, with a circular opening for a driveshaft flanked by sockets for gingang tie-beams, each in a block surround. The two-storey section on the right of the barn has an external stone stair.
The rear elevation of the east range features a doorway to the 18th-century barn with a raised alternating-block surround, and to the right, there is a projecting gabled cart shed with an entrance that has a timber lintel.
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