Cart Shed/Stable/Granary Ranges At Camerton Hall Farm Approximately 120 Metres South Of Chestnut Lodge is a Grade II listed building in the East Riding of Yorkshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 21 May 1987. Cart shed/stable/granary ranges. 1 related planning application.
Cart Shed/Stable/Granary Ranges At Camerton Hall Farm Approximately 120 Metres South Of Chestnut Lodge
- WRENN ID
- dark-zinc-pine
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- East Riding of Yorkshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 21 May 1987
- Type
- Cart shed/stable/granary ranges
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a late 18th-century cart shed, stable, and granary range, originally built for Edward Ombler. Later alterations and an addition were made in the 19th century. The building is constructed of brown brick with pantile roofs and is located approximately 120 metres south of Chestnut Lodge, near Thorngumbald Main Road.
The ranges form the north and west sides of a former foldyard and are arranged in an L-shape. The north range contains a cart shed to the east and stables to the west, while the west range includes stables with a cart shed outshut on its east side. The west range, with its west side, features eight first-floor openings. A central, segmental-arched waggon entrance has double board doors on strap hinges. To the left of the waggon entrance is a stable door with a three-pane overlight, next to a similar door flanked by a sash and a blind window panel, both with basket arches. Similar openings are to the right of the waggon entrance, with one having a 15-pane casement. Small, rectangular first-floor hatches are also present; four have board doors, one a four-pane casement, and two have missing doors. Stepped eaves are visible, and the roof is hipped to the left. The east side, facing the foldyard, features two segmental-headed ground-floor hatches to the right, a pair of hatches above, and a six-bay arcade leading to the cart shed outshut on the left. This arcade has elliptical arches on square brick piers with rounded angles; the left bay has 20th-century blocking.
The north range's north side has twelve first-floor openings. A five-bay cart shed section on the left features mid-19th century cast-iron columns supporting a continuous timber lintel, with a board door and blind overlight panel beneath a segmental arch. To the right is a stable door with a four-pane overlight, flanked by single blind, basket-arched window panels, and four small breathers on each side. The first floor has a central board door, flanked by hatches with board doors on strap hinges. Tumbled-in brick is visible on the raised gables. A section to the right angle has a segmental-headed ground-floor window, a single first-floor hatch, a single-flue stack corbelled out to the corner, and a hipped roof. The left gable end has a segmental-headed stable door, a diamond-shaped breather to the ground floor, and a hatch to the first floor. The south side has a ten-bay arcade of round arches with recessed blocking, containing two stable doors and three part-glazed wooden ventilator hatches to the left; an inserted door is to the right. Eleven first-floor hatches are similar to those on the north side, most with board doors.
Inside the west range, stalls are fitted with keyed segmental archivolts on square piers. The building originally formed part of the farmyard of Camerton Hall, which has since been demolished. Adjoining ranges to the east and south are not considered to be of special interest.
Detailed Attributes
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