High Farm Public House Lounge And Food Bar is a Grade II listed building in the Leeds local planning authority area, England. Public house.

High Farm Public House Lounge And Food Bar

WRENN ID
grim-finial-bracken
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Leeds
Country
England
Type
Public house
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

High Farm Public House, Lounge and Food Bar is a complex of farm buildings that has been converted into a public house. The original structure dates back to the 17th century or earlier and features a timber-frame construction that was clad in stone, likely around 1725, with 19th-century alterations and a conversion that took place around 1976. The timber-frame is covered in coursed squared gritstone, topped with a stone slate roof. The building is approximately six bays long, with a northern aisle added when the stone casing was constructed.

On the south side, there is a barn doorway that reaches almost the full height of the wall, featuring rebuilt jambs and a segmental arch made of shaped voussoirs. There are square hay eyes on either side of the doorway with plain stone surrounds, which have since been glazed. A linking bay that connects to the rear wing of the public house was added in 1976 and projects to the left. The north front has low stone walling that supports the roof of the northern aisle, with openings created around 1976. The left return shows two barn slit vents, and a straight joint indicates that the northern aisle is a later addition.

An outbuilding attached to the east side of the barn is likely from the early 18th century and was altered around 1976. This structure is low, with two storeys and two bays. It has two entrances that have been converted into windows, along with two small openings under the eaves—one of which is now a window and the other is blocked.

Inside the barn, the surviving timbers reveal a fully framed structure that includes three full trusses with posts, tie beams, king posts with angle struts, wall plates, and braces at the barn entrance. Later trusses extend the barn to the west. The stables and outbuildings were previously listed on January 9, 1975.

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