Huntshaw Water And Attached Outbuildings is a Grade II listed building in the Torridge local planning authority area, England. First listed on 19 October 1988. Inn.

Huntshaw Water And Attached Outbuildings

WRENN ID
riven-cinder-hemlock
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Torridge
Country
England
Date first listed
19 October 1988
Type
Inn
Source
Historic England listing

Also on this page: sale history · flood risk · radon risk · detailed attributes ↓

Description

Huntshaw Water is an inn that has been converted into a house, originally built in the 17th century and remodeled around 1840, when the first floor and an attached outbuilding were added. The building features colourwashed render over stone and cob, with what is likely brick on the first floor. It has a gabled slate roof, 20th-century brick end stacks, and a 17th-century external stone lateral stack to the left of the front door, while the lateral stack at the rear has been truncated. The structure has a three-unit plan and stands two storeys high.

On the left side, there is a three-window range with timber lintels above a central 20th-century plank door and late 19th-century two-light casement windows with glazing bars. A window to the right is set in a blocked 17th-century doorway. The lower one-window range to the right features a mid-19th-century plank door in a beaded frame and late 19th-century two-light casements with glazing bars. Two mid-19th-century outshuts have been added to the rear.

Inside, the room on the left has a slate-flag floor, boxed beams in the left and central rooms, and a chamfered beam noted in the right room. The left room contains a chamfered bressummer with a cusped stop over an open fireplace, with a window at the rear and a 19th-century pothook. The central room also has a chamfered bressummer over an open fireplace against the rear wall. There are 19th-century plank doors and a 17th-century plank door with strap hinges to the left. A 17th-century doorway leads to the rear of the left room, and a blocked doorway is adjacent to the central fireplace. The bay to the right was not inspected.

Attached to the left are outbuildings dating from around 1840, constructed of coursed stone rubble and rendered at the front, topped with a gabled pantile roof. These outbuildings form an L-plan layout, with a stable nearest to the house on the right and looseboxes along the road to the left. The stable features a 19th-century loft door above the stable door, which has chamfered ribs to the left, and a plank stable door to the right, along with a stable door leading to the looseboxes.

More on this building

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  • No EPC on record for this property
  • Sale history — 1 transaction since 1999
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  • Radon risk assessment
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