Belmont Farmhouse And Attached Outbuildings is a Grade II listed building in the Staffordshire Moorlands local planning authority area, England. First listed on 3 January 1967. Farmhouse, outbuilding. 2 related planning applications.
Belmont Farmhouse And Attached Outbuildings
- WRENN ID
- brooding-pilaster-amber
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Staffordshire Moorlands
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 3 January 1967
- Type
- Farmhouse, outbuilding
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Belmont Farmhouse and attached outbuildings date from the early 19th century, with the farmhouse itself likely built around 1860. The construction consists of coursed, squared, and dressed red sandstone with a hipped tiled roof, featuring four ridge stacks on the house. The building follows an even, U-shaped plan.
The symmetrical entrance front of the farmhouse, forming the west limb of the U, is two storeys high and has seven windows. These are stone-chamfered mullion windows, with the outer pairs having two lights and the remaining windows having three. The entrance is marked by a four-panel door positioned one window in from each end.
Attached to the east of the house are farm buildings that form the remaining limbs of the U-shaped plan, possessing a continuous eaves height. These buildings include a formal approach front with a central, segmental-arched coach entry – now blocked and with an arch-headed boarded door – and a side elevation of the house to the right. A matching single range of windows is located on the left end, and a small, low gabled addition sits to the right of the centre.
Detailed Attributes
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