Stables,Coachhouses And Stablehands' Accommodation Immediately To West Of Eastwood Park is a Grade II listed building in the South Gloucestershire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 June 1984. Stables, coachhouses, accommodation. 2 related planning applications.
Stables,Coachhouses And Stablehands' Accommodation Immediately To West Of Eastwood Park
- WRENN ID
- lesser-courtyard-torch
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- South Gloucestershire
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 5 June 1984
- Type
- Stables, coachhouses, accommodation
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
These stables, coachhouses, and stablehands’ accommodation, now used as garages, stores, and offices, were likely built around 1865, possibly by S.W. Daukes of Gloucester. The buildings are constructed of coursed-squared rubble with freestone dressings, and have hipped Cotswold stone slate roofs. They form three ranges around a courtyard. The south range has single-story coach houses with eight segmental-headed plank doors and roof vents with gables. The north range is also single-story and was originally stables, featuring five doors with pointed overlights and gables. The courtyard is enclosed by quadrant walls connecting the north and south ranges to stable ranges; these have a three-bay single-story design. The west range is two stories and has attics with gabled dormers, and comprises three bays with two segmental-headed coach entrances on the ground floor and three-light casement windows with segmental heads on the first floor. A central, projecting four-stage clock tower rises above, with chamfered edges, a clock face, and an octagonal concave spire topped with lucarnes under gablets and overhanging, bracketed eaves.
Detailed Attributes
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