Former stables, billiard room and coach house wings on south and east sides of the stable yard at The Oaks is a Grade II listed building in the Sutton local planning authority area, England. Outbuilding. 3 related planning applications.

Former stables, billiard room and coach house wings on south and east sides of the stable yard at The Oaks

WRENN ID
distant-brick-acorn
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Sutton
Country
England
Type
Outbuilding
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: related consents · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

The building comprises former stables, a billiard room, and a coach house, forming wings on the south and east sides of the stable yard at The Oaks. Construction occurred in the late 18th century and mid-19th century, with various ranges built at different times to enclose the yard. The buildings are mainly of red brick, with some walls seemingly of flint rendered to appear as red brick. They have slate roofs.

The east range includes a single-storey wing at its north end. This section has a red brick front wall with a central doorway, now a window, above which is a small-paned overlight. Flanking the window are windows with four panes wide and three deep, each with a top-opening light and voussoirs. The left-hand window formerly occupied a doorway and has a hipped slate roof. Adjoining this to the south, and also within the east range, is a two-storey coach house wing with a slate hipped roof. The yard elevation of the coach house features a wide vehicular entry with ledged doors, and above, a red brick or rendered wall that appears as red brick with a ledged loft door. This connects to the south range via a single-storey link with a ledged door and overlight.

The south range, not depicted on the 1842-43 Title Map, appears to date from the mid-19th century. Its red brick walls have a slate roof, hipped to the west. The yard elevation features a central doorway with red brick voussoirs, an overlight with five panes, and a ledged door. To either side are window openings with red brick voussoirs and windows with small panes and top pivot lights. The rear wall has four small segmental windows. An inner wall is of clunch and flint.

On the south elevation of the east coach house wing are two square windows with glazing bars. This wall is partially of red brick and may also be flint rendered to resemble brick.

The east elevation incorporates a sash window with side-lights and glazing bars, set within a round-headed arch with a boarded tympanum and a brick stringcourse extending outwards from the arch impost levels. This window likely illuminated a former billiard room. A single-storey building sits at the angle between the east and south ranges; its east wall has a central segmental doorway with a ledged door, a sash window with glazing bars to the right, and a small two-light casement to the left. Inside, a 19th-century fireplace and grate are present. The yard surface is paved with small 19th-century black square setts.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
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  • Related listed building consents — 3 applications
  • Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
  • Flood risk assessment
  • Radon risk assessment
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