Garage Premises Of Barton Of Bawtry is a Grade II listed building in the Doncaster local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 June 1968. Garage premises, house, cottage. 5 related planning applications.

Garage Premises Of Barton Of Bawtry

WRENN ID
weathered-pier-thyme
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Doncaster
Country
England
Date first listed
5 June 1968
Type
Garage premises, house, cottage
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: EPC · related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

The garage premises of Barton of Bawtry, formerly listed as 11-13 Market Place, is a house and attached cottage that date back to 1691. The cottage likely has an early 17th-century core and has been encased in early 19th-century materials, with 20th-century alterations. The cottage features fragmentary internal timber framing and is constructed of painted brick with pantile and Welsh slate roofs.

The main house is a two-storey, eight-bay structure from 1691, with a rear right wing and two gabled wings in the rear-left angle. The low two-storey, three-bay cottage is set back on the left. The ground floor of the main house has been altered and includes part-glazed doors in bays 1, 4, and 6. Bays 2 and 3 feature a six-light showroom door with glazing bars in a corniced surround, while bay 5 has a shop window in a pilastered and corniced surround. Bays 7 and 8 contain old sash windows with glazing bars. At mid-floor level, stone plaques with relief carvings of lions are located at each end of the facade, believed to have come from Old St. Georges' Church in Doncaster.

On the first floor, the windows are sashes with glazing bars in flush wooden architraves, with those in bays 1-3 being later additions with horned sash frames. Bays 7 and 8 have 20th-century casements with glazing bars, and there is a date plaque above bay 4. The roof has boxed eaves and is hipped with pantiles, featuring two brick ridge stacks.

The cottage wing on the left has a 20th-century addition to bay 1, which is not of special interest. Bay 2 includes a shop window to the left of a part-glazed door, and bay 3 has a four-pane sash window to the left of another part-glazed door. On the first floor, there are two horizontally-sliding sashes with glazing bars. The roof of the cottage has dentilled eaves and is steeply pitched with Welsh slate, featuring a brick end stack on the left and a stack between bays 2 and 3, both set forward of the ridge.

More on this building

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  • Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
  • No sale records on file
  • Related listed building consents — 5 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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