House, South East Of Bullock Steads Farmhouse, And Farm Buildings Attached is a Grade II listed building in the Newcastle upon Tyne local planning authority area, England. First listed on 27 August 1952. A C18 House, farm buildings. 4 related planning applications.
House, South East Of Bullock Steads Farmhouse, And Farm Buildings Attached
- WRENN ID
- solemn-pillar-hemlock
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Newcastle upon Tyne
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 27 August 1952
- Type
- House, farm buildings
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
A late 18th-century house with attached farm buildings, situated south east of Bullock Steads. The house is built of English garden wall bond brick with sandstone rubble to the rear; the hemmel and cattle shed are of sandstone rubble with ashlar dressings. The roofs are pantiled with tile ridges for the house and hemmel, sandstone flags at the eaves of the house, Welsh slate to the cattle shed, and asbestos to the loft.
The house is two low storeys with two bays. It has a boarded door on the right-hand side under a wedge-shaped stone lintel, and a horizontal sliding sash window to the left, also under a rendered lintel and flat sill. Smaller horizontal sliding sashes at the eaves lack sills. A truncated end brick chimney is visible on the left-hand side, and brick coping is present on the right return gable, where tumbled-in brickwork is also visible.
The shelter and loft is two storeys and seven bays, featuring seven elliptical-headed arches with hit-and-miss windows above, flanked by pitching doors under cambered brick arches. Ventilation slits are located in the outer bays. The cattle shed is single-storeyed and three bays wide, with central boarded doors flanked by hit-and-miss windows and pecked stone lintels and projecting sills. The hemmel is single-storeyed and three bays, with a central Dutch door, a horizontal sliding sash window to the left, and a hit-and-miss window to the right, both with pecked stone lintels and projecting stone sills; the door lintel is similar to that of the Dutch door.
Detailed Attributes
Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.