The Stables To Dullingham House is a Grade II listed building in the East Cambridgeshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 25 April 1984. Stable block. 2 related planning applications.
The Stables To Dullingham House
- WRENN ID
- long-vault-jet
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- East Cambridgeshire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 25 April 1984
- Type
- Stable block
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The Stables to Dullingham House are an early 18th-century stable block constructed alongside the main house. The block is built of red brick with prominent gauged red brick banding, window arches, a cornice, and a dentil-enriched triangular pediment above the archway. The roofs are hipped and slate-covered. The main west-facing entrance features coach houses with tall, panelled doors on either side of a carriageway, incorporating round-headed inner and outer arches. Above, there are five oval windows with glazing bars, and at first floor level. A domed, arched wooden bell cote, partially slated, is topped with an iron weather vane finial. To the left is a stable range, now converted into cottages, displaying ten two-light casement windows with transoms and small panes. Similar small panes are found in the rectangular fanlights above the three flush-panelled doors. The range to the right, possibly including the tack room, has four similar windows and two doors, with a small ridge stack.
Detailed Attributes
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