Brandicarr Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the North Lincolnshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 6 January 1987. Farmhouse.

Brandicarr Farmhouse

WRENN ID
iron-corridor-violet
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North Lincolnshire
Country
England
Date first listed
6 January 1987
Type
Farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Brandicarr Farmhouse is an 18th-century farmhouse built in 1787 for the Yarborough Estate. It has been re-tiled around 1970 and is constructed of yellow brick in Flemish bond, topped with a black clay pantile roof. The building has a T-shaped layout, featuring a central entrance hall on the south front with two rooms, and a rear wing that adjoins a stable range.

The farmhouse is two storeys high with an attic and consists of three symmetrical bays. The 20th-century gabled porch leads up a flight of three stone steps to a half-glazed, flush-panelled door framed by 12-pane sash windows in flush wooden architraves, complete with stucco sills and segmental arches. The first-floor sash windows are slightly smaller and have similar surrounds. There are three wrought-iron tie-bar ends at the first-floor level and two at the attic level, along with a moulded wooden eaves board. The gables feature tumbled-in brick with stone coping and shaped kneelers, and there are end stacks.

On the left and right returns, there are 12-pane sashes on the ground floor, and round-headed attic windows with glazing bars set in slightly recessed architraves, along with dated tie-bar ends at the gables. The left return's rear wing includes a two-storey, two-bay section with a half-glazed door beneath a segmental arch and single three-light casements with glazing bars on both floors. This section has a coped gable and an end stack. There is also a single-storey, three-bay section to the left, featuring a half-glazed door flanked by a 12-pane sliding sash and a 20th-century casement beneath segmental arches, with a stepped and dentilled brick eaves cornice.

Inside the front range, there is a single-flight closed-string staircase with a ramped and wreathed handrail, column-on-vase balusters with square knops, and an arched opening leading to the rear passage. The entrance hall and ground-floor front rooms have dado rails, and there are panelled window shutters and doors in architraves. The adjoining stable range at the rear is noted as being of no special interest.

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