Hall Farm Buildings is a Grade II listed building in the Broxtowe local planning authority area, England. Farm buildings. 2 related planning applications.
Hall Farm Buildings
- WRENN ID
- tangled-bastion-woodpecker
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Broxtowe
- Country
- England
- Type
- Farm buildings
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a model farm dating from the early 19th century. It is constructed of brick with hipped and pyramidal slate roofs, and features ashlar and brick dressings. There are side wall and ridge stacks. The farm is arranged symmetrically around a rectangular courtyard, incorporating a barn, dovecotes, stables, and two cottages. The windows are a mix of casements and Yorkshire sash windows, with chamfered segmental headed openings.
The north side of the courtyard is dominated by a central barn with lower flanking wings. The central door is flanked by two round breathers, with five similar breathers above. Identical openings are found at the rear. Each wing has a blocked barn door containing a stable door flanked by a single casement. At the rear of the wings, there is a blocked barn door. A square dovecote to the west has a casement to its west side, and a casement on each floor to the north side. The dovecote to the east has pigeonholes to the southeast and a casement on each floor to the north side.
The west side of the courtyard has, to the left, a square cottage with a casement and, to the right, a 20th-century door and casement. Above, there are two casements. Further to the right, a single-storey shed has four round-headed openings, altered to contain a casement and three doors. A two-storey stable follows, with three casements flanked by single doors, then a further casement. The rear elevation features three casements above. To the right of the stable is a lean-to addition with a door and a hatch in the return angle. The cottage has a flat-roofed 20th-century addition to its west, as well as a 20th and 19th-century casement to the south.
The east side of the courtyard has a two-storey stable with three casements flanked by single stable doors, followed by two casements. A pigsty has three round-headed openings. Further along are three similar altered openings containing two casements and a door. The east cottage has two casements on each floor. The south side has a door and a casement, while the east side features a lean-to outshut and a large lean-to cowshed with an asbestos cement roof. The farm buildings formed the Home Farm to Eastwood Hall.
Detailed Attributes
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