Brewhouse, Crewyard And Mill Barn At Hall Farmhouse is a Grade II* listed building in the Gedling local planning authority area, England. First listed on 27 April 1987. Brewhouse, crewyard and mill barn.
Brewhouse, Crewyard And Mill Barn At Hall Farmhouse
- WRENN ID
- leaning-cornice-pigeon
- Grade
- II*
- Local Planning Authority
- Gedling
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 27 April 1987
- Type
- Brewhouse, crewyard and mill barn
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The brewhouse, crewyard, and mill barn at Hall Farmhouse date from the late 18th century. The structure is built from coursed and squared rubble and brick, featuring plain tile, asbestos cement, and pantile roofs. It has dressed stone quoins and a coped south gable, with an external side wall stack. The building is two storeys high, plus attics, and measures five bays wide by seven bays deep, forming a C-plan.
The windows include Yorkshire sashes and casements. The brewhouse has an off-centre casement on the west side, flanked on the left by a door and on the right by a sash window. Above this are two square hatches. The north gable features an altered brick and stone stair to the left, with a close boarded door above and a central casement above that. The south gable has a central door and a central attic casement above it.
The crewyard on the east side includes stables that are seven bays long, with two doors on the left, three stable doors to the right, and two blocked casements further right. The mill barn on the south side has a door flanked by single casements to the left, and a stable door and casement to the right. The west gable has a rubble stair with a kennel below, and a doorway above. The north side has a late 20th-century concrete block addition on the left, with a door to its right, a blocked opening above to the left, and a large pitching eye flanked by single casements to the right. The east gable was rebuilt in brick in the mid-19th century and includes an adjoining coursed rubble wheel pit that houses a mid-19th-century breast shot iron water wheel. There are two blind recesses with segmental heads, and above is a casement with a segmental head.
Inside, the building features a timber ladder, reed and plaster floors, and a restored 18th-century principal rafter roof with butt purlins, struts, and wind braces. The east end contains a pair of millstones along with ancillary equipment and a chaff cutter. This machinery is complete and in use.
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