Stable/Granary/Pigeoncote And Adjoining Outbuilding Approximately 30 Metres South West Of Number 35 (Home Farmhouse) is a Grade II listed building in the North Lincolnshire local planning authority area, England. Stable/granary/pigeoncote.

Stable/Granary/Pigeoncote And Adjoining Outbuilding Approximately 30 Metres South West Of Number 35 (Home Farmhouse)

WRENN ID
first-groin-gold
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
North Lincolnshire
Country
England
Type
Stable/granary/pigeoncote
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

This stable, granary, and pigeon cote, along with an adjoining outbuilding, is located approximately 30 meters south-west of No. 35 (Home Farmhouse) and is believed to have been built around 1809. The structure is made of yellow-brown brick and features a pantile roof, forming the south side of a courtyard.

The main stable/granary is three stories tall and consists of a single room, while the adjoining outbuilding is a single-story single room located to the east. On the north side, the stable/granary has round-headed entrances on both the ground and first floors, with the first-floor entrance featuring a board door. There is a blind lunette window on the second floor and a dentilled brick eaves cornice. The gables are stone-coped and have shaped kneelers. The left gable end includes a boarded round-headed opening to the attic, which contains two tiers of circular pigeon holes and shelves, as well as a wrought-iron weather vane. The right gable end displays wrought-iron figures indicating "18".

The rear of the building has a round-headed opening on the ground floor, a square-headed opening on the first floor with four slots below, likely for former loading-platform supports, and another round-headed opening on the second floor. The outbuilding features a round-headed opening at the rear with recessed blocking and a dentilled brick eaves cornice. All doorways are equipped with large ashlar blocks for hinges and catches. This structure is likely contemporary with the threshing barn located on the north side of the courtyard, which is also dated 1809.

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