Glebe Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the Vale of White Horse local planning authority area, England. First listed on 15 January 1986. Farmhouse. 3 related planning applications.

Glebe Farmhouse

WRENN ID
watchful-remnant-rush
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Vale of White Horse
Country
England
Date first listed
15 January 1986
Type
Farmhouse
Source
Historic England listing

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

Description

Glebe Farmhouse is a farmhouse dating from around 1720, with a late 18th century two-bay block added to the right of the front. It is constructed from coursed limestone rubble and features a stone slate roof with stone stacks finished in brick. The original layout consists of three units.

The building has three storeys and a five-window range. The mid-18th century section on the left includes a chamfered timber lintel above a 19th century six-panelled door (four of the panels are glazed) with a mid-20th century porch. There is a segmental brick arch over a late 19th century three-light casement window, and late 19th century three-light and one-light casements on the first floor. The late 18th century block to the right has segmental brick arches over a six-pane sash window, a 20th century French window, and late 19th century three-light casements on the first floor. The roof is gabled, with a gable end stack on the late 18th century block and similar stacks on the mid-18th century range, offset to an exposed stack on the right. Segmental brick arches are present over an 18th century sash window and a late 19th century three-light casement next to an 18th century stair turret at the rear. There is also an early 18th century one-storey and attic block at the rear, built with similar materials and featuring gabled and hipped roofs, along with a segmental brick arch over an 18th century sash window, a three-light casement, and three late 19th century one-light casements.

Inside, the farmhouse has a stone flag floor, late 19th century six- and four-panelled doors in moulded architraves, and a ribbed door in the attic. The room to the left features a chamfered beam and an early 18th century chamfered stone fireplace with consoles supporting the mantelshelf. The staircase has a quarter turn design.

The roof structure consists of a five-bay collar truss with butt purlins. The ground-floor room of the block at the rear has a reused 17th century ovolo-moulded beam.

More on this building

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