Stables And Coach-House Approximately 50 Metres South-East Of Goole Hall is a Grade II listed building in the East Riding of Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 16 December 1986. Stables and coach-house.

Stables And Coach-House Approximately 50 Metres South-East Of Goole Hall

WRENN ID
half-bastion-mist
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
East Riding of Yorkshire
Country
England
Date first listed
16 December 1986
Type
Stables and coach-house
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

The stables and coach-house, located approximately 50 metres south-east of Goole Hall, were built around 1820 for Jarvis Empson. The coach-house has been lowered and re-roofed in the 20th century. Constructed from brown brick with red rubbed-brick dressings, the stables feature a Yorkshire slate roof, while the coach-house has an asbestos roof. The stables are rectangular in plan, consisting of four rooms with a central entrance hall, forming the north side of the stable yard. A short wall connects to the single-room coach-house on the left.

The stables are two storeys high and consist of five symmetrical bays. The north front has a blind arcade of full-height round arches, featuring a two-course impost band and rubbed-brick arches. The round-headed entrance has a Y-traceried panelled door, flanked by windows with flat arches: one window retains its original 12-pane sash in a recessed wooden architrave, another has an architrave but is missing glazing, one is a 20th-century window, and one is boarded up. The first floor has segmental-headed openings with sills and wooden architraves for former hatch doors. There is a plain brick frieze and stepped eaves, topped by a hipped roof.

A stone-coped brick wall connects to the low two-storey single-bay coach-house, which features quoins and a full-height elliptical-arched recessed panel with a pair of boarded doors that have strap hinges, beneath a two-course impost band. There is a blocked first-floor opening with an ashlar sill and a two-course brick band above. The coach-house has a single-pitch roof sloping to the rear. The right return includes an external staircase leading to a first-floor door, with a sash window to the left (missing glazing bars) beneath rubbed-brick flat arches. The rear of the stables has a central round-arched entrance flanked by single segmental-headed doors and small windows, with segmental-headed openings on the first floor. At the time of the resurvey, the building was partly disused and in decay.

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