Outbuilding, Pigeoncote, Barn And Stables At Plum Tree Farm is a Grade II listed building in the Bassetlaw local planning authority area, England. First listed on 4 December 1985. Outbuilding, farm.
Outbuilding, Pigeoncote, Barn And Stables At Plum Tree Farm
- WRENN ID
- over-barrel-marsh
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Bassetlaw
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 4 December 1985
- Type
- Outbuilding, farm
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The outbuilding, pigeoncote, barn, and stables at Plum Tree Farm date from the early 19th century, while the pigeoncote and barn are from the late 18th century. The structures are built of brick and feature pantile roofs with plain tile verges and plain eaves. There is a single external corner stack. The arrangement consists of seven bays wide by four bays deep, forming three sides of a square yard, with buildings that are one and two storeys high.
The outbuilding on the north side is a single-storey, single-bay structure with a right-side opening that has a segmental head. The two-storey pigeoncote on the east side has two bays, a first-floor band, and dentillated eaves. Its south side features a left-side plank door with a segmental head and a right-side Yorkshire sash. Above, there are blocked pigeonholes. The west gable includes a brick and stone stair leading to a door, with two tiers of pigeonholes and a blocked round opening above. The north side has a casement with a segmental head and two breathers.
The barn to the east has a slatted opening on the left and a stable door to the right, followed by a single Yorkshire sash, a diamond breather, and another door. All openings have segmental heads, and above are two pitch holes. The north side features an irregular opening on the left and a segmental-headed opening with a two-leaf door on the right, along with three diamond breathers and a plank door beyond. Further along are a slatted casement and a stable door, both with segmental heads, and above are a blocked opening, a pitch hole, and a single casement. The east gable has a single 20th-century casement above.
The stable to the east of the yard is a single-storey, four-bay structure with three stable doors and three slatted casements on the west side, all featuring segmental heads. The stable to the south of the yard is also single-storey and consists of two bays.
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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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