Stables At Debdale Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Mansfield local planning authority area, England. First listed on 22 October 1986. Stables. 2 related planning applications.
Stables At Debdale Hall
- WRENN ID
- under-jamb-nightshade
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Mansfield
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 22 October 1986
- Type
- Stables
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The stables at Debdale Hall, now used as stables and workshops, date from the early 18th century and mid 19th century. They are constructed of dressed stone with hipped roofs made of plain tiles and slate, featuring ashlar dressings. The building has a plinth, first floor and eaves bands, and coped gables. It is two storeys high with a total of 12 bays, consisting of 7 bays from the 18th-century range and 5 from the 19th-century addition, which includes a central stable yard.
The doorways have segmental heads and keystones. The east front showcases a projecting central bay with a pair of carriage doors, a garage door to the left, and a blocked window. To the right, there is a door, a blocked doorway, and a casement, followed by a recessed bay with another pair of garage doors. Above this, there are four metal casements, a blocked window, and a plain sash, with a round opening in the pediment. The south return angle features a casement and a blocked window above it.
In the 19th-century range, the east side includes a blocked door and doorway to the left, and a boundary wall with flat coping to the right. The stable yard to the south has two casements with segmental heads and 20th-century doors and windows, with four windows above that have plastic glazing. The east side has a central pair of carriage doors with elliptical heads and a door to the right. The north side features four carriage openings with elliptical heads and two doors to the right, with a hay barn above and a plastic glazed window to the right.
The west front has a central blocked carriage opening flanked by single doors with overlights, plus a 20th-century casement. Above are two plastic glazed windows. The 18th-century range on the west side has a blocked carriage entry with a segmental head and an inserted casement, along with a central round window, a plain sash to the left, and three different casements to the right. The adjoining 19th-century stables are L-shaped, featuring a casement flanked by stable doors to the west and two stable doors to the north. There is also an adjoining curved boundary wall with half-round coping, approximately 5 meters long. Other adjoining outbuildings are of no special interest.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
- Related listed building consents — 2 applications
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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