Treluggan Farmbuildings At Approx 40 M South Of Treluggan Farmhouse is a Grade II listed building in the Cornwall local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 June 1985. Farm buildings. 1 related planning application.

Treluggan Farmbuildings At Approx 40 M South Of Treluggan Farmhouse

WRENN ID
rough-remnant-plover
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cornwall
Country
England
Date first listed
5 June 1985
Type
Farm buildings
Source
Historic England listing

Description

A planned group of farm buildings dates from the mid-to-late 19th century. The buildings are constructed of slatestone rubble with granite quoins, brick jambs, and cambered brick arches. Roofs are hipped and covered with Delabole dry slate. The buildings form a single-depth range around a rectangular courtyard, with an outshut to the east. The ground slopes downwards to the east and south. A wide central entrance faces north, flanked by single-storey lodge-like buildings, originally used for pigs or calves. A single-storey range stands opposite to the south, featuring alternating doors and window openings, likely for loose boxes. To the east is a two-storey shippon range with storage above. The west shippon range, the most architecturally significant, is built into a bank to the rear. The central part of this range is taller and features three wide openings to the ground floor. A wide central doorway to the first-floor grain store has a segmental arch and a canopy formed by a roof extension, supported by shaped wooden corbels and brackets; a similar doorway is present to the rear. Small first-floor windows are primarily for ventilation. The half-hipped roof includes a bellcote with a pyramidal roof, topped with a weather vane. Original wooden window frames, including single-light and two-light mullioned windows, are present throughout, with some retaining original shutters and vertical iron bars. A 16-pane two-light casement window is located on the ground floor to the left of the west range. The interiors retain original king post roof structures and floors, with cobbled floors in the north range, most of the west range, and the northern end of the east range. Other ground floors have been concreted over for cow stalls. Surviving original fittings include slate pen partitions to the building east of the entrance, slate feeders in part of the west range, and some original stall partitions. A brick-vaulted surface water or slurry collection tank is located under the floor of the building in the south-east corner, connected to a drain from the lowest part of the yard. The farm group is unusually intact.

Detailed Attributes

Structured analysis including materials, construction techniques, architect attribution, and related listed building consent applications. Sign in or create a free account to view.

Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.