Farm Buildings At Home Farm is a Grade II listed building in the Newark and Sherwood local planning authority area, England. Farm buildings. 3 related planning applications.
Farm Buildings At Home Farm
- WRENN ID
- far-attic-curlew
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Newark and Sherwood
- Country
- England
- Type
- Farm buildings
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The farm buildings at Home Farm are largely late 18th century, with significant alterations and additions made in the mid-19th century. They may have been designed by George Gilbert Scott for John Manners-Sutton. The buildings are constructed of brick, with gabled and pyramidal patterned and plain tile roofs, tile hanging, and shingles. Distinctive blue brick diaper work, dentillated eaves, coped gables with kneelers, and a single roof stack are present. The complex is arranged in an H-plan with an 11-bay layout, including a late 18th-century barn forming a west wing.
The east front has an off-centre pair of barn doors with a lattice panel above and a casement with a segmental head to the right. The south gable features a triple leaded light above. The main range has a central carriage entry with a strutted bressummer and a shingled gable containing a 20th-century sash. Mullioned iron casements with red and blue rubbed brick heads are set to the left, with a small, louvred dormer above. A square tower, of three stages, is positioned to the right, with a blue brick band, dentillated eaves, a patterned tile pyramidal roof, and a wind vane. Segmental, corbelled openings are present to the south and west, with a square corner pier. The second stage has a shouldered mullioned casement to the south and another to the east. The timber-framed third stage has quatrefoil panels with matchboard or shingle infill and an octagonal panel for a clock with a gabled hood. A workshop range adjoins to the right, having a continuous lean-to roof, casements with segmental heads, sliding doors, and a door with a segmental head. A small dormer and a coped gable with a triple leaded light are also visible. A projecting, two-storey wing, tile-hung on the west side, incorporates a casement and a sliding door.
The east front features a projecting, single-storey central bay with a hipped gableted roof. The north gable has a brick and stone external stair leading to a plank door. The rear elevation includes a continuous 20th-century lean-to, an off-centre door with a segmental head, iron casements, and 20th-century gabled dormers. A carriage entry and a 20th-century cartshed are situated to the west, followed by a 19th-century stable block with stable doors, casements, and trefoil openings in the dormers. A single-storey brick stable with dentillated eaves and a patterned tile roof features garage doors, a stable door, and casements at each end. Inside, stop-chamfered spine beams with run-out stops are present.
Detailed Attributes
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