Stable Block Including St Theresa'S Cottage To North East Of Lemmington Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Northumberland local planning authority area, England. First listed on 31 December 1969. Stable block. 4 related planning applications.

Stable Block Including St Theresa'S Cottage To North East Of Lemmington Hall

WRENN ID
fallow-pewter-stoat
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Northumberland
Country
England
Date first listed
31 December 1969
Type
Stable block
Source
Historic England listing

Description

This is a stable block, built around 1915, located to the north-east of Lemmington Hall. It includes St. Theresa's Cottage. The building is constructed of snecked stone with some brick snecks, rock-faced quoins, and rock-faced-and-margined dressings, with a red clay tile roof and stone flags to the eaves.

The south-east elevation features a symmetrical design with two-storey centre and end pavilions, each of one bay wide, connected by lower, single-storey, two-bay linking sections. The taller central pavilion has a Venetian window on the ground floor, an oculus flanked by quatrefoils above, a bracketed eaves cornice, and a pyramidal roof with a wrought-iron weathervane. The end pavilions have round-arched windows on the ground floor with two oculi above, and pyramidal roofs with wrought-iron finials; a sundial is located on the south-west pavilion. The ground floor windows of the north-east pavilion have been altered. The linking sections each have a round-arched carriage entrance in the outer bay, stable doors with radial fanlights, and small round-arched fixed lights with decorative glazing. All doors are ledged and boarded with long hinges. Small side wings with parapets step down to end in ball finials.

The rear elevation is symmetrical, with Venetian windows in the outer pavilions. The centre pavilion has round-headed ground floor windows. Small upper windows alternate with depressed curved crosses, and square windows are found in the linking sections. A vertical-panelled door, set under a shell panel, is found on the south-west return.

Small extensions beyond the side wings are not considered to be of particular architectural interest.

Detailed Attributes

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