L Shaped Range Of Workshops And 2 Attached Houses At The Home Farm is a Grade II listed building in the Leeds local planning authority area, England. First listed on 22 July 1986. Workshops, attached house.
L Shaped Range Of Workshops And 2 Attached Houses At The Home Farm
- WRENN ID
- blind-fireplace-torch
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Leeds
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 22 July 1986
- Type
- Workshops, attached house
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
A range of workshops and two attached houses, dated to the mid-to-late 18th century and altered in the early 19th century, was built for Edwin Lascelles, 1st Lord Harewood, by John Carr. The buildings are located at the Home Farm, Harewood Stank. They are constructed of punch-dressed stone, with clapperboard to part of the north range and Westmorland green-slate roofs. A workshop was converted to a house around 1950.
The buildings have an L-shaped plan and consist of single- and two-storey sections. The north range has an added house to the left end, with a symmetrical three-bay façade. A doorway, topped with an overlight, has a monolithic lintel cut with false voussoirs. Sixteen-pane sashes are present, similarly lintelled and with projecting sills, with smaller sashes on the first floor. A coped gable is to the left, and a ridge stack is present. To the right is a gable rising in line with the attached workshops, also coped, with a stack. The workshop section has ten ground-floor bays; bays 3, 6, 8 and 9 feature doorways with monolithic lintels and tie-stone jambs. Other bays have windows with slightly-cambered arches and voussoirs, some with sixteen-pane sashes and others with smaller, multi-pane Yorkshire sashes. The first floor has a twelve-light, multi-paned wooden framed window flanked by three-light windows.
The east range breaks forward on the right, incorporating the continuation of a workshop to the left of a former glass store, now a house, and a single-storey store to the right. The workshop has three doorways to the right of a Yorkshire sash window, with a two-light wooden framed multi-pane window above, set in a clapperboard wall. A coped gable with a kneeler is on the right of the junction with the house. The house is lower, with three first-floor windows. Quoins are visible. A doorway has composite jambs and a chamfered surround to each end, the left one being blocked. A two-light window is to the left of a four-light window, with three of two lights above, all windows with plain stone surrounds and recessed flat-faced mullions. A coped gable with kneelers is to the right. The store has a doorway with monolithic jambs to the left of a single-light window, and two three-light windows, all with plain stone surrounds and flat-faced mullions. A coped gable with kneelers is on the right. Single ashlar ridge stack.
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Nearby listed buildings
- Forge House and Attached Archway Leading to Home Farm Workshops
- Granary at Stanks Farm
- Barn to North of Granary at Stanks Farm
- Home Farmhouse
- Sundial in the Rock Garden
- Bridge Over Roadway Between Stables to South West of Harewood House and the Home Farm
- Farmbuilding with Cartshed to Rear and Attached Stable, Set Within Quadrangle of Home Farm Building
- Home Farm buildings forming a quadrangle
- Ice House and Dovecote Near Weir by Stank Beck
- The Head Gardener's House