Field House Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the East Riding of Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 16 December 1986. Farmhouse.
Field House Farmhouse
- WRENN ID
- far-roof-peregrine
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- East Riding of Yorkshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 16 December 1986
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Field House Farmhouse is a building that has been converted into two houses. It dates from the late 17th century to early 18th century for the north range, with later alterations made in the late 19th century and further changes in the 20th century. The early part of the building is constructed from brown brick in English bond, while the later section features red brick in Flemish bond with yellow brick dressings. The roof is made of Welsh slate.
The farmhouse has a two-room north range with an entrance in a lean-to extension on the north side. The south front has a central entrance hall with a projecting porch and also consists of two rooms. The north range is two storeys high with three bays and includes a single-storey extension on the right. It features a central Venetian window with a 16-pane flush sash, a blind round-headed panel with a keyed arch, and blind side panels beneath lintels. To the left, there is a 16-pane sash in a flush wooden architrave beneath a late 19th-century cambered brick arch, and to the right, a 12-pane sliding sash beneath a 20th-century lintel. On the first floor, there is a similar central Venetian window flanked by 16-pane sashes in flush wooden architraves beneath segmental header arches. The late 19th-century stepped and cogged brick eaves cornice is also notable, along with the original moulded stone coping on the right gable with plain kneelers. A central 19th-century stack has yellow brick dressings, a cogged cornice, and ashlar coping. The right gable end features two-course brick bands at mid first-floor level and a blocked attic opening.
The south front is also two storeys high with three bays and has a central full-height projecting pedimented porch. It includes a plinth and quoins, with an entrance that has a yellow brick surround beneath an incised stucco cambered arch. The door is half-glazed and has an overlight and sidelights with margin lights. There are 4-pane sashes in reveals with sills and rubbed-brick flat arches, and a narrow first-floor window above the entrance. The eaves cornice is stepped and cogged, and the gables have plain stone coping. There are two stacks with cogged cornices and stone coping. The returns of the building have single sashes on each floor and broken pedimented gables with yellow brick panels in the tympanum. The interior of the north range has been largely altered in the 19th and 20th centuries and has not been fully investigated.
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