Flintmill Grange Farmhouse With Attached Pavilions And Wall Lining East Side Of Farmyard is a Grade II listed building in the Leeds local planning authority area, England. Farmhouse.
Flintmill Grange Farmhouse With Attached Pavilions And Wall Lining East Side Of Farmyard
- WRENN ID
- winter-minaret-alder
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Leeds
- Country
- England
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Flintmill Grange is a farmhouse with attached pavilions and a wall lining the east side of the farmyard, built in the mid-18th century for the Thorp Arch estate. It is constructed of ashlar magnesian limestone and features stone slate roofs. The building is two storeys high with an attic and has five bays. The main house has wing walls that connect to two-storey, one-bay pavilions. A wall at the rear of the right pavilion lines the east side of the farmyard.
The main house has a plinth and features nosed stone steps leading to a central six-panel door with an overlight that has Gothick glazing bars, all framed by a stone architrave with a fluted frieze and a broken swan-necked pediment. The windows are sashes with glazing bars set in raised surrounds that have projecting keystones. There is a band beneath the first-floor windows that matches the ground floor. The eaves cornice is present, and the end stacks are rebuilt in yellow brick.
The right wing wall has a doorway and ashlar copings, while the right pavilion features a 16-pane sash window on the ground floor and a sash with glazing bars above, both with raised surrounds and a hipped roof. This pavilion is connected to a tall wall that lines the farmyard and ends in a gatepier. The left wing wall connects to a pavilion that has a doorway within a later greenhouse and an unglazed 16-pane sash window on the first floor, also with a hipped roof. The left pavilion connects to an L-shaped range of farm buildings at the rear.
The returns of the house have Diocletian attic windows. At the rear, there are tripartite windows on each floor with sashes of four, twelve, and four panes, along with a round-headed stair window featuring intersecting glazing bars. Inside, the main house has a contemporary wooden staircase with turned balusters and a wreathed and ramped handrail. There are later fireplaces, including one in the ground-floor right room that was brought from Thorp Arch Hall.
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- No EPC on record for this property
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- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
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