Priory Gardens Cottage, Estate Office, Workshops, Stables And Coach House is a Grade II listed building in the Redcar and Cleveland local planning authority area, England. First listed on 25 April 1984. A Victorian Cottage, outbuilding. 1 related planning application.

Priory Gardens Cottage, Estate Office, Workshops, Stables And Coach House

WRENN ID
odd-lime-tarn
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Redcar and Cleveland
Country
England
Date first listed
25 April 1984
Type
Cottage, outbuilding
Period
Victorian
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: EPC · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

Priory Gardens Cottage, along with the estate office, workshops, stables, and coach house, is a mid-19th century building constructed from dressed sandstone with a clay pantile roof. The cottage is single-storey and has an "L" shape, featuring sash windows and a canted bay window on the ground floor.

Adjoining the southwest side of the cottage is a workshop, which was originally a brewhouse for Gisborough Old Hall. This structure dates back to the late 17th century, with a first floor added in the mid-19th century. The ground floor is made of dressed sandstone, while the first floor is brick, with quoins. It has a hipped Welsh slate roof with lead ridge cladding, and the ground floor windows have 20th-century glazing. The first floor features Yorkshire sashes with glazing bars, and there are double loft doors on the southeast side.

The estate office, a single-storey extension to the southeast of the former brewhouse, is of similar age and materials. The stables and coach house, located on the southeast side of the cottage, also date from the late 17th century. They are built from dressed sandstone and have a hipped clay pantile roof with stone ridge copings, featuring one off-centre stack and one tall brick stack at the northwest corner. This structure is two storeys high, with a central round-headed passage opening on the southwest side and two elliptical-arched carriage openings to the right, which are now blocked. The northeast side has been altered but still includes sashes, Yorkshire sashes, and boarded doors. The listing also includes a late 19th-century brick and Welsh slate lean-to extension on the southwest side. The outbuildings to the east of Priory Gardens Cottage are not of interest.

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  • Radon risk assessment
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