Barn With Attached Cart Shelter And Granary Approximately 10 Metres North West Of Ty'N-Y-Coed is a Grade II listed building in the Shropshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 21 October 1987. Barn.

Barn With Attached Cart Shelter And Granary Approximately 10 Metres North West Of Ty'N-Y-Coed

WRENN ID
tenth-barrel-brook
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Shropshire
Country
England
Date first listed
21 October 1987
Type
Barn
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

This is a barn with an attached cart shelter and granary, located approximately 10 meters north-west of Ty'n-y-coed. The barn dates from the late 17th century, with a right bay that was added in the late 18th or early 19th century. It features a weatherboarded timber frame set on a rubblestone plinth, with uncoursed limestone rubble on the left gable end and the right bay, accented by yellow and red brick dressings. The roof is made of corrugated iron.

There are doorways located to the left, right, and center, with the right doorway featuring a segmental-headed stable door. Eaves hatches are positioned immediately to the right of the left door and above a fixed-light window to the right of the center door, with another hatch directly to the right. A segmental-headed window is found to the right of the right doorway.

The cart shelter and granary are attached to the left gable end and date from the late 18th or early 19th century. This structure is timber-framed with red brick infill and has a graded slate roof. It consists of a two-bay cart shelter with a granary above. The framing includes vertical posts with light horizontal members and a long straight tension brace to the right. There is a fixed-light window in the center.

Adjoining the cart shelter is a lean-to made of uncoursed limestone rubble, which features external lateral stone steps providing access to a timber projection to the left of the granary. This projection has plank doors on the left and front, the latter equipped with pointed strap hinges.

Inside the barn, the framing is visible, consisting of rectangular panels, two of which extend from the cill to the wall-plate. The roof is a double-purlin design spanning four bays, with rubblestone and principal rafters at the gable ends. It includes a collar and tie beam truss with V-struts connecting the collar to the original right gable end, while the other two bays feature long raking struts from the tie beams to the principal rafters. There are straight tension braces from the wall posts to the tie beams and from the wall posts to low weatherboarded partitions. A loft has been inserted into the two right end bays.

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