Barns, byre and hayloft, and coach house, approximately 30 metres to north of Aston Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Shropshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 2 January 1981. Barn.

Barns, byre and hayloft, and coach house, approximately 30 metres to north of Aston Hall

WRENN ID
burning-quoin-saffron
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Shropshire
Country
England
Date first listed
2 January 1981
Type
Barn
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

The barns, byre and hayloft, and coach house located approximately 30 metres north of Aston Hall date from the 17th and 18th centuries, with early 19th-century alterations and additions. The building is arranged in an L-plan.

The south range features a timber-framed structure with a stone plinth, square panels, and red brick nogging. There is an 18th-century random coursed sandstone addition to the southeast, along with early 19th-century re-facing to the southwest and an addition to the northwest. The roof is covered with old tiles. The range consists of three framed bays with later additions and is one to two storeys high. It has a dentil brick eaves cornice on the northwest side and a ridge stack also on the northwest. The northeast side has scattered 19th-century wooden casements, a pair of bearded doors on the left, and a two-leaf boarded door on the right. The southwest side features two pairs of boarded coach-house doors on the left, flanking a stack, with depressed-arched gauged heads, keystones, and impost blocks. To the right, there are two boarded doors, one with a segmental overlight and the other with a depressed-arched head and a depressed-arched three-light window above, which has a gauged head, impost blocks, and a keystone. The gable end to the southeast shows a left door and an exposed double queen post truss.

The north range consists of barns from the 18th and 19th centuries, built with regular coursed sandstone, red brick, and an old tile roof. It is one storey high and features ventilation holes on the northwest side. The southeast side has two pairs of boarded doors on the left, and to the right, there is a carriageway with two large boarded doors. There are 20th-century lean-to additions on the southeast. Inside the carriageway, double queen-post trusses are exposed in the gable ends. This building is included for its group value.

More on this building

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  • Sale history — 2 transactions since 2010
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  • Radon risk assessment
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